Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a method for measuring an analyte such as a biological
component or environmental substance by using a reaction system which forms a detectable
substance such as a dyestuff based on the chemical reaction of the analyte contained
in a sample and measuring the detectable substance, and to a testing piece for use
in the method.
Background of the Invention
[0002] Methods of detecting and determining an analyte which is contained in a sample, for
example, a bio-component in the body fluid such as urine and blood, a trace amount
of a substance existent in food, medicine, or natural environment, an industrial chemical
substance, a trace amount of a substance contained in waste, or the like include ones
for measuring a detectable substance such as a dyestuff formed by a reaction system
in which the analyte is involved.
[0003] One of the methods is, for example, a method comprising subjecting hydrogen peroxide
formed by the chemical reaction of the analyte and a reactive color coupler (dyestuff
precursor) to an oxidation-reduction reaction in the presence of peroxidase (POD)
and determining the formed dyestuff compound by colorimetry. This method is frequently
used in clinical diagnosis and the like because of its simplicity. Another one of
the methods is a method of measuring an analyte based on an electrochemical reaction
for reducing/oxidizing with an electrode the oxidized/reduced form of an electron
carrier (mediator) formed by an oxidation-reduction reaction between the electron
carrier and the analyte caused by an enzyme or the like.
[0004] However, in the above conventional methods, as measurement sensitivity is not sufficiently
high when the amount of the analyte is very small, a highly accurate measurement result
cannot be obtained. Therefore, the development of a highly accurate measuring method
having improved measurement sensitivity has been desired.
[0005] Further, since measurement takes long as a reaction takes time, or it takes time
for a detection reaction to reach a termination, a rating method for carrying out
quantitative determination from a reaction rate has such a problem that the accuracy
of quantitative determination is low. To cope with this, to increase the reaction
rate, the reaction system is heated, or the concentration of a reagent for the reaction
is increased. However, in the method for heating the reaction system, a heat source
is required for heating and analysis is thereby complicated. When the formed substance
is thermally instable, detection is difficult and this means cannot be employed. The
method for increasing the concentration of the reagent is not practical because it
leads to a rise in the background of detection and an increase in the cost of analysis.
There is also a method for adding a catalyst to increase the reaction rate. However,
since there are many detection reactions for which preferred catalysts are unknown
yet, this method is not practical as well. As described above, most of the conventional
methods are still unsatisfactory and a novel method which enables quick measurement
by increasing the reaction rate more simply has been eagerly desired.
[0006] When a reaction which forms a substance insoluble in a reaction solvent is included
in the reaction system which forms a detectable substance, there is such inconvenience
as enumerated below and called in question.
(1) In measurement in which optical detection is carried out using a liquid reagent,
for example, in a batch type automatic biochemical test apparatus, when a dyestuff
formed by a reaction is insoluble in a solvent, it separates out and adheres to the
wall of a measurement cell to shield incident light or transmitted light or cause
the pollution of a dispensing nozzle, and abnormality in absorption coefficient, diffusion
or light shielding by agglomeration, thereby making measurement difficult.
(2) Similarly, in measurement in which optical detection is carried out using a liquid
reagent, when an insoluble by-product is formed, it adheres to the wall of a measurement
cell to shield incident light or transmitted light or cause the pollution of a dispensing
nozzle, and diffusion or light shielding by agglomeration, thereby making measurement
difficult.
(3) In measurement in which a dyestuff formed by a reaction caused by dropping onto
or infiltrating a sample to be measured into a testing piece is optically detected,
when the formed dyestuff is insoluble in a sample solvent, the dyestuff deposits on
the substrate of the testing piece nonuniformly, or the agglomeration of the dyestuff
occurs, thereby deteriorating measurement accuracy.
(4) In electrode measurement using a liquid reagent, for example, in a batch type
automatic biochemical test apparatus, when an insoluble by-product is formed, the
pollution of an electrode is caused by covering the surface of the electrode with
the insoluble deposit, thereby reducing biochemical response and deteriorating measurement
accuracy.
[0007] The difference between the words "insoluble" and "hardly soluble" indicates a difference
in the degree of insolubility in a solvent. In the present invention, the word "insoluble"
may be interchanged by "hardly soluble" in the following description.
[0008] Particularly, when the formed detectable substance is insoluble in a reaction solvent,
reaction rate may be reduced, or measurement sensitivity may be lowered because the
reaction system which forms the detectable substance is not uniform and the reaction
does not proceed quickly in the prior art method. For example, in the reaction system
using an enzyme, the reaction product may deposit near the enzyme or impede the reaction.
[0009] Therefore, a measuring method using a reaction which forms a by-product insoluble
in a reaction solvent in which the reaction is carried out has rarely been employed.
Accordingly, it has been necessary to select a reaction which does not form an insoluble
product as a detection system or to develop a new detection reaction system by synthetic
chemical means so that the product becomes soluble in a reaction solvent. However,
these circumstances have limited a reaction system used. Meanwhile, much time and
labor have been required for the research and development of a reaction system which
forms only a soluble substance. Further, it has been necessary to add a surfactant
for solubilizing, emulsifying or dispersing the product. However, the addition of
a surfactant is disadvantageous from the view point of measurement cost and may produce
an adverse effect such as interruption of a reaction. Therefore, it cannot be said
that it is a perfect solution. Then, a novel method which solves this problem easily
and enables measurement in the presence of an insoluble product has been ardently
desired.
[0010] The method of measuring an analyte using a reaction system which forms hydrogen peroxide
as described above is an important measuring method as there are many reactions which
form hydrogen peroxide as a substance produced by oxidation. However, accurate measurement
has not always been easy in the prior art methods for the following reasons. That
is, in these measuring methods, the amount or concentration of a detectable substance
such as a dyestuff compound must have a quantitative correlation with a specific substance
such as hydrogen peroxide in some cases. However, an oxidation-reduction system in
colorimetry is affected by the strong oxidizing activity of excessive hydrogen peroxide
or the strong reducing activity of ascorbic acid or the like contained in a biological
sample, and the above detectable substance such as a dyestuff compound decomposes,
whereby a measurement error may be produced.
[0011] For example, in these measuring methods, when an excessive amount of hydrogen peroxide
is temporarily formed from an analyte such as glucose by an oxidase such as glucose
oxidase, a reaction between the formed dyestuff and hydrogen peroxide occurs in addition
to a reaction between a dyestuff precursor and hydrogen peroxide. As a result, the
formed dyestuff is decomposed by hydrogen peroxide as soon as it is formed and discolored.
[0012] When an enzyme such as peroxidase for producing active oxygen species such as a superoxide
having high reactivity from hydrogen peroxide, or transition metal ions and a complex
thereof exerting a similar function are existent in a sample, the active oxygen species
react with the formed dyestuff, decomposes and discolors it. This interference has
affected measurement adversely. When a reaction which forms a detectable substance
such as a dyestuff is carried out while it is exposed to the air, the formed dyestuff
may be oxidized by oxygen contained in the air or oxygen dissolved in a reaction solution,
decomposed and discolored.
[0013] Therefore, various attempts have been made such as the research of a dyestuff precursor
which provides a stable substance which is hardly decomposed and the addition of various
stabilizers but these are still unsatisfactory.
[0014] Reducing substances such as ascorbic acid, uric acid and bilirubin contained in a
biological sample have a great influence on an oxidation-reduction reaction. Particularly,
how to measure an analyte accurately in the presence of ascorbic acid has been a significant
theme in the field of clinical analysis for long time. Various interference suppression
means such as selective decomposition with an enzyme, decomposition by the addition
of periodic acid, oxidation decomposition with iron-ethylene diamine tetraacetate
chelate, and selective separation with a semipermeable membrane have been tried in
addition to the research of the above-described dyestuff precursor and the like (see
Yoshihide Ohta, Yutaka Ogawa, Rinsho Kensa, 34 (4), 502-504 (1990); Japanese Patent
Publication No. 1-41223(1989); Japanese Patent Publication No. 2-4861(1990); Japanese
Patent Publication No. 4-18630(1992); Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 5-95797(1993);
and Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 7-155196(1995)).
[0015] There are further methods of measuring a specific analyte by forming a dyestuff (for
example, an azo dyestuff) having quantitative relationship with the specific analyte
by various known reactions other than the oxidation-reduction reaction (for example,
condensation reactions such as an acid-base reaction and the coupling reaction of
a diazonium salt, a complex forming reaction and the like) and optically determining
the formed dyestuff. These methods are important measuring methods detailed in Bunseki
Kagaku Binran (ed. by the Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry), for example. However,
some of the thus formed dyestuffs may be an instable compound which is decomposed
by oxygen in the atmosphere, an oxidizing or reducing substance contained in a sample,
hydrogen ions or bases contained in the sample, light or the like. To measure this
substance, for example, quick operation is required, or operation must be carried
out in an atmosphere substituted by nitrogen or light shaded environment. Otherwise,
an error may be given to measurement.
[0016] Methods using an electron carrier (mediator) include one in which an analyte is measured
with high sensitivity by carrying out an enzyme reaction for a predetermined time
to oxidize/reduce the electron carrier during that time, thereby accumulating the
oxidized/reduced form of the electron carrier, and reducing/oxidizing the accumulated
oxidized/reduced form of the electron carrier with an electrode after the predetermined
time to produce great electrochemical response. Conventionally, the accumulated oxidized/reduced
form of the electron carrier has been subjected to a decomposition reaction such as
reduction/oxidation by a reducing substance or oxidizing substance which is coexistent
with the accumulated oxidized/reduced form of the electron carrier, whereby an error
may be given to measurement.
[0017] When the detectable substance is stable without being decomposed, the quantitative
relationship is ensured at the time of measurement and a more excellent S/B ratio
(signal-to-background ratio) can be obtained by carrying out time integration, whereby
the accuracy of analysis can be improved and sensitivity can be increased. Therefore,
to develop a reaction system which forms a detectable substance which is stable and
can be measured easily, many efforts have been made so far. Various reagents which
have been developed so far as reaction substances which form such a stable detectable
substance are listed in many handbooks, Bunseki Kagaku Binran, for example.
[0018] However, the research of a reaction system which forms such a stable substance takes
much time and labor, and efforts are still being made to search for a reaction system
which forms a detectable substance which is always stable and can be measured easily.
Therefore, even in currently used measurement methods, there are many cases where
an instable substance which is decomposed by pH, moisture content, coexistent substance
such as an oxidizing/reducing substance, light or the like must be measured as the
detectable substance.
[0019] An analytical testing piece, used to examine and analyze a component contained in
a liquid sample such as urine, for measuring an analyte by measuring a detectable
substance such as a formed dyestuff based on the chemical reaction of the analyte
contained in a sample, generally comprises a test portion which is a functional portion
for carrying out a series of analytical processes such as the absorption, diffusion,
reaction, detection and the like of the liquid sample and a support portion for supporting
the test portion, and further has a sensor, sample solution suction apparatus and
the like as required. The above test portion comprises layers or areas for carrying
out various functions. Generally speaking, the test portion comprises a sample suction
portion for sucking the sample and introducing it thereinto; a diffusion and infiltration
portion for diffusing and infiltrating the sample uniformly in the test portion; a
reagent portion containing a reagent which reacts with the analyte contained in the
sample; a reaction portion where a reaction such as a detection reaction occurs; a
developing portion for separating a component contained in the sample, a dyestuff
formed by the detection reaction or the like by a chromatography-like function such
as adsorption or distribution; a time control portion for adjusting the proceeding
of a reaction making use of a time during which the sample moves; a holding portion
for trapping or removing a component contained in the sample, formed dyestuff or the
like by an adsorption function; a detection portion for detecting a dyestuff or the
like by reflectance, transmission/absorption or fluorescence; an absorbing portion
for absorbing excess of a sample solution, added washing solution and developing solution
to prevent a back flow, and the like.
[0020] In an actual testing piece, these portions having the above functions are not always
existent independently. For example, like litmus paper in which the detection portion
is the same as the sample suction portion, the reagent portion and the reaction portion,
there is a case where one portion has multiple functions.
[0021] For example, there are single-layered and multi-layered testing pieces which comprise
a diffusion layer which also serves as a sample suction layer, a detection layer which
also serves as a reagent layer and a reaction layer, or comprise a detection layer
independent from a reaction layer which also serves as a reagent layer. Most of them
are bonded to a base by an adhesive layer. There is a testing piece which has a developing
layer or a holding layer having a function to remove an interfering component between
a reaction layer and a detection layer. There is also a testing piece in which a diffusion
layer also serves as a developing layer and is in contact with a reagent layer by
an adhesive layer. When detection is carried out by measuring reflectance, a reflection
layer may be formed before or after a detection layer. The sample is dropped onto
the diffusion layer which also serves as the sample suction layer and diffused uniformly
to dissolve a reagent contained in the reagent layer, whereby a reaction proceeds.
Thus, for example, a dyestuff is produced from a dyestuff precursor. When the reagent
layer and the reaction layer also serve as the detection layer, the dyestuff is directly
measured. However, when an independent detection layer is provided, the produced dyestuff
or the like further infiltrates and moves into the detection layer and is measured
at that point (see H.G. Curme, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 24 (8), 1335-1342 (1978);
B. Walter, Analytical Chemistry, 55 (4), 498A (1983); Asaji Kondo, Bunseki, 1984 (7),
534; Asaji Kondo, Bunseki, 1986 (6), 387; Bunseki Kagaku Binran, p.8 (edited by the
Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry: fourth revised edition, Maruzen (1991); and
Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 6-213886(1994) (Masao Kitajima et al.)).
[0022] There is also a testing piece which comprises an infiltration portion of a developing
solution at an end of the testing piece on a small piece of filter paper; a sample
suction portion adjacent to the infiltration portion; a reaction portion which also
serves as a reagent portion (having an enzyme immobilized thereto) near the center
of the testing piece; and a detection portion which also serves as a reagent portion
(having a dyestuff precursor or the like immobilized thereto), a reaction portion
and a holding portion after the reaction portion and makes use of the plane movement
of the sample or the like. In this case, after the sample is dropped onto the sample
suction portion, the developing solution is infiltrated from the end of the testing
piece to move the sample by a capillary action, the sample reacts with the enzyme
in the reaction portion which also serves as the first reagent portion (having the
enzyme immobilized thereto) to produce hydrogen peroxide which is then moved by the
developing solution to color the dyestuff precursor or the like in the detection portion
which also serves as the second reagent portion (having the dyestuff precursor or
the like immobilized thereto), the reaction portion and the holding portion, and adsorb
and hold the produced dyestuff or the like (detectable substance). Since the hydrogen
peroxide moves along with the movement of the developing solution and a coloration
reaction occurs along with the movement, when the amount of the analyte increases,
the length of coloration expands, whereby the substance can be measured. (see M. P.
Allen, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 36 (9), 1591-1597 (1990); D. Noble, Analytical
Chemistry, 65 (23), 1037A (1993).)
[0023] This testing piece is used in a urine test, a biochemical test, an immunochromatography
test and the like. In an example of a testing piece for immunochromatography, when
one end of filter paper having an antibody immobilized thereto (it can be said that
the entire surface thereof serves as a reagent portion, a reaction portion, a developing
portion, a holding portion and a detection portion) is immersed in a developing solution
prepared by mixing a sample containing an antigen (analyte) and an enzyme-linked antigen
as a reagent to develop with a color developing solution which is a second reagent
(containing a dyestuff precursor), a portion containing the enzyme-linked antigen
which has been developed and captured is colored like a belt. The length of the colored
belt is proportional to the amount of the antigen contained in the sample. (see R.
F. Zuk, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 31 (7), 1144-1150 (1985).)
[0024] As another example of a testing piece for immunochromatography, there is a testing
piece which comprises a reagent portion (first antibody immobilized colored latex)
which also serves as a sample suction portion at one end on a small piece of a membrane
filter, a reagent portion (second antibody which recognizes the same antigen as that
of the first antibody but is different in epitope) which also serves as a developing
portion near the center, a developing portion and further a detection portion which
also serves as a reagent portion (anti-first antibody antibody) and a holding portion.
When a sample is dropped onto the sample suction portion, an antigen-antibody reaction
between an antigen (analyte) and the first antibody occurs, an immuno-complex directly
moves along with the movement of the sample, and a sandwich reaction between the immuno-complex
and the second antibody occurs in the reagent portion which also serves as a developing
portion. However, excess of the first antibody which does not form an immuno-complex
passes through the developing portion along with the movement of the sample and is
captured in the detection portion which also serves as the reagent portion (anti-first
antibody antibody) and the holding portion. The analyte can be measured by measuring
the coloration of the colored latex (containing a dyestuff as a detectable substance)
to which the first antibody is immobilized. (see I. W. Davidson, Analytical Proceedings,
29, 459 (1992).)
[0025] However, in the above testing pieces, a dyestuff or the like produced by a reaction
with a component to be analyzed has solubility in a sample solution, reaction solution
or the like in many cases with the result of such inconvenience as the elution of
the dyestuff or the like into a bulk solution, a back flush to the diffusion layer,
and the adhesion of the dyestuff or the like to the adjacent test portion in multi-item
test paper having a plurality of test portions. Due to the movement of the dyestuff
or the like toward the edge of the test portion by drying, there occurs such a phenomenon
that the concentration of a center portion becomes low and that of a peripheral portion
becomes high.
[0026] Such an inconvenient phenomenon that deteriorates measurement sensitivity, precision
and accuracy is particularly marked in urine test paper or the like which is immersed
in a sample solution for measurement but is very common irrespective of the type of
sample.
[0027] Meanwhile, there have been proposed a method for preventing the elution of a reagent
by covering a test portion (Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2-38861(1990)),
a method for preventing liquid junction between adjacent test portions by causing
the test portions composed of a porous structure (such as a porous layer or a porous
film) having high absorptivity to uniformly absorb a sample (Japanese Patent Application
Laid-open No. 2-6541(1990)), a method for selecting a reaction for forming an insoluble
dyestuff, a method for capturing a formed dyestuff using an insoluble and hydrophobic
binder (fixing agent) (Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 7-181174(1995)),
a method for increasing the distance between adjacent test portions in the multi-item
test paper, a method for controlling and adjusting immersion time, a method for controlling
time so that measurement is carried out before diffusion, and the like. However, covering
a test portion or preparing a porous structure by a precipitation-solidification method
makes a test paper production process complicated. When a reaction for forming an
insoluble dyestuff is selected, a product inhibition of enzyme activity occurs. A
testing piece prepared by using a hydrophobic polymer as a binder has such a defect
that the absorptivity of an aqueous sample solution deteriorates. A multi-item testing
piece has such a defect that when the distance between adjacent test portions is increased,
a larger area is required or it is disadvantageous for the movement of the sensor
as a single sensor moves through a plurality of test portions to measure reflected
light. The other methods have respective problems to be solved. For example, the method
for controlling immersion time is troublesome in an urine test, the method for controlling
time is not easy because of the relationship between control time and reaction time.
Satisfactory solutions to these problems are yet to be found.
[0028] A method for measuring an analyte from electrochemical response at the time of oxidation-reduction
using the above electron carrier (mediator), a method for measuring ions as an analyte
by measuring the potential of a membrane upon the movement of a complex compound formed
by using a ligand (ionophore) which is coordinately bonded or ion bonded to a specific
ion in a liquid film electrode, and the like are known as important measuring methods.
Generally speaking, in an electrode composed of an oxidized/reduced form of an electron
carrier or a complex compound, the elution or diffusion of the electron carrier or
ligand is prevented by adding the electron carrier or ligand to an insoluble polymer,
and the electron carrier or ligand is held near the surface of the electrode so that
electrons can move quickly at the same time. Since the movement of a substance in
a polymer is limited, a reaction between an analyte contained in the sample or an
intermediate substance produced from the analyte and the electron carrier or ligand
contained in the insoluble polymer is interrupted. A satisfactory solution to this
fundamental problem is yet to be found as well.
[0029] EP-A-0337053 discloses the adsorption of tyronase with bentonite for isolation of
the enzyme.
Disclosure of the Invention
[0030] It is an object of the present invention to provide a high-sensitivity measuring
method for measuring an analyte by measuring a detectable substance such as a dyestuff
or the like formed based on the chemical reaction of the analyte. The term "measurement"
comprehends both quantitative and qualitative measurements.
[0031] It is another object of the present invention to provide a method which can improve
measurement accuracy and increase measurement sensitivity by stabilizing the detectable
substance in the above method for measuring the analyte.
[0032] It is still another object of the present invention to provide a novel method which
enables quick measurement by increasing the reaction rate of a chemical reaction in
the above measuring method.
[0033] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a high-sensitivity measuring
method in the above method using a reaction system including the formation reaction
of an insoluble substance.
[0034] It is a still further object of the present invention to provide an analytical testing
piece which can suppress the diffusion and elution of a dyestuff or the like, enables
accurate examination and analysis, and is easy to use.
[0035] The inventors of the present invention have found that the above problems can be
solved by carrying the formation reaction of a detectable substance in the presence
of a layered inorganic compound selected from layered clay minerals and hydrocalcite
and by allowing a layered inorganic compound to be contained in a test portion, such
as a detection portion for detecting a detectable substance, of a testing piece. The
present invention has been accomplished based on the above finding.
[0036] Thus, the present invention provides a method for measuring an analyte, comprising
a step of measuring a detectable substance by using a reaction system including a
formation reaction of a detectable substance based on a chemical reaction of the analyte
contained in a sample, wherein a layered inorganic compound is added to the reaction
system including the formation reaction of the detectable substance. This method will
be referred to as "measuring method of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0037] The present invention also provides the above-mentioned method for measuring the
substance comprising a step of adding the layered inorganic compound to the reaction
system to allow the layered inorganic compound to adsorb the detectable substance.
This method will be referred to as "first method of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0038] In the first method of the present invention, high-sensitivity measurement is made
possible by allowing the layered inorganic compound to adsorb the formed detectable
substance. That is, for example, the detectable substance is adsorbed to the layered
inorganic compound and settles, whereby measurement sensitivity in optical or electrochemical
detection is improved. In this case, the detectable substance may be adsorbed to the
layered inorganic compound and settle as a colloidal agglomerate. However, it does
not always need to be agglomerated.
[0039] The present invention also provides the method for measuring the analyte, wherein
the layered inorganic compound is caused to exist in the reaction system to suppress
the decomposition of the detectable substance. This method will be referred to as
"second method of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0040] In the second method of the present invention, by causing the layered inorganic compound
to exist in the reaction system which forms the detectable substance to be measured,
a complex between the detectable substance and the layered inorganic compound is formed
almost at the same time when the detectable substance is formed or before it is decomposed
by a coexistent substance with the result that the decomposition of the detectable
substance by the function of the coexistent substance in the reaction system can be
suppressed.
[0041] The present invention further provides the method for measuring the analyte, wherein
the formation reaction of the detectable substance is carried out in the presence
of the layered inorganic compound to increase a reaction rate of the formation reaction.
This method will be referred to as "third method of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0042] In the third method of the present invention, by carrying out the formation reaction
of the detectable substance in the presence of the layered inorganic compound, the
reaction rate of the formation reaction is increased and quick measurement is made
possible, thereby greatly shortening measurement time and also a time required for
the detection reaction to reach a termination with the result that the determination
accuracy of a rating method for quantity determination from a reaction rate can be
improved. The reason for an increase in the rate of the formation reaction of the
detectable substance is not always clear but it is considered that the reaction rate
is increased by the adsorption of a reaction starting substance or a reaction intermediate
of the formation reaction to the surface of the layered inorganic compound and the
concentration thereof on the surface.
[0043] The present invention further provides the method for measuring the analyte wherein
at least one of reactions constituting the reaction system is the formation reaction
of a substance insoluble in a reaction solvent. This method will be referred to as
"fourth method of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0044] In the fourth method of the present invention, it is possible to make a reaction
proceed quickly like a uniform system by causing a layered inorganic compound to exist
in the reaction system including the formation reaction of the detectable substance
preferably in a dispersed state even when the detectable substance or a by-product
of the reaction is insoluble in a reaction solvent. It is considered that this is
because the formed insoluble detectable substance or the insoluble by-product is adsorbed
to the layered inorganic compound and uniformly dispersed in the reaction system together
with the layered inorganic compound. In the present invention, the detectable substance
or the by-product can be prevented from separating out into the reaction system and
becoming difficult to be handled at the time of detection by allowing the detectable
substance or the by-product insoluble in a solvent to be adsorbed by the layered inorganic
compound.
[0045] Cases where the detectable substance or the by-product are prevented from becoming
difficult to be handled at the time of detection may be as follows.
(1) In measurement in which optical detection is carried out using a liquid reagent,
for example, in a batch type automatic biochemical test apparatus, when a dyestuff
formed by a reaction is insoluble in a solvent, by allowing the dyestuff to be adsorbed
by the layered inorganic compound, it is possible to prevent the dyestuff from separating
out and adhering to the wall of a measurement cell to shield incident light or transmitted
light and cause the pollution of a dispensing nozzle and abnormality in absorption
coefficient, scattering or light shielding. Thus, it is possible to prevent measurement
from becoming difficult.
(2) Similarly, in measurement in which optical detection is carried out using a liquid
reagent, when an insoluble by-product is formed, by allowing the by-product to be
adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound, it is possible to prevent the by-product
from adhering to the wall of a measurement cell to shield incident light or transmitted
light and cause the pollution of a dispensing nozzle and scattering or light shielding
by agglomeration. Thus, it is possible to prevent measurement from becoming difficult.
(3) In measurement in which a reaction is carried out by dropping onto or infiltrating
a sample to be measured into a testing piece and the formed dyestuff is optically
detected, when the formed dyestuff is insoluble in a sample solvent, by allowing the
dyestuff to be adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound, it is possible to prevent
the dyestuff from nonuniformly depositing on the reaction portion or the detection
portion of the testing piece and from being agglomerated, thereby eliminating deterioration
in measurement accuracy.
(4) In electrode measurement using a liquid reagent, for example, in a batch type
automatic biochemical test apparatus, when an insoluble by-product is formed, by allowing
the by-product to be adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound, it is possible to
prevent the insoluble deposit from covering the surface of the electrode to cause
the pollution of the electrode and lower electrochemical response, thereby eliminating
deterioration in measurement accuracy.
[0046] A measuring method which the present invention is applied to is not particularly
limited if it is a method for measuring an analyte by measuring a detectable substance
by using a reaction system including the formation reaction of the detectable substance
based on the chemical reaction of the analyte contained in a sample. The detectable
substance may be the analyte as a matter of course. Further, the method may be a method
for measuring an analyte qualitatively by measuring a detectable substance or a method
for measuring an analyte quantitatively by using a reaction system including the formation
reaction of a detectable substance having a quantitative correlation with the analyte.
Moreover, not only a case where a reaction system which forms a detectable substance
directly by the chemical reaction of an analyte is used but also a case where the
chemical reaction of the analyte and the formation reaction of the detectable substance
are indirectly connected to each other through another chemical reaction are included.
Out of these methods, the method of the present invention is preferably applied to
a measuring method using a reaction system in which the detectable substance is a
dyestuff or electron carrier formed by an oxidation-reduction reaction, a measuring
method using a reaction system in which the formed detectable substance is a dyestuff
such as an azo dyestuff or a complex between an ionophore and an analyte, and the
like.
[0047] Particularly, a method of optically measuring a dyestuff formed quantitatively by
an oxidation-reduction reaction between hydrogen peroxide formed from a biological
component by an oxidizing enzyme reaction and a reactive color-producing reagent is
used in the quantitative determination of each component contained in the body fluid
in clinical examination, environmental analysis and the like. By applying the measuring
method of the present invention in these analytical and detection methods, highly
sensitive measurement is made possible.
[0048] Speaking of the second method of the present invention in particular, in an oxidation-reduction
reaction system, for example, an oxidizing substance, a reducing substance or a peroxidase-like
substance often exists in the reaction system as a reaction intermediate or an impurity
in a sample, and a detectable substance may be decomposed by the function of these
existent substances in the reaction system. In this case, the second method of the
present invention is useful.
[0049] According to the second method of the present invention, in the above measuring method
using an oxidation-reduction reaction between hydrogen peroxide and a reactive color-producing
reagent, such a problem that a measurement error is made by the decomposition and
discoloration of a dyestuff or the like caused by the function of an oxidizing substance
such as excessive hydrogen peroxide or a reducing substance such as ascorbic acid,
uric acid and bilirubic acid existent in the reaction system can be overcome.
[0050] The third method of the present invention makes it possible to adsorb a reaction
starting substance or a reaction intermediate to the surface of a layered inorganic
compound by adding the layered inorganic compound having cationic exchange ability
to a reaction system particularly when the starting substance or the intermediate
of the formation reaction of a detectable substance is a cationic compound, whereby
the formation reaction rate can be improved and quick measurement is made possible.
Therefore, the third method of the present invention is useful for a measuring method
using the above reaction system.
[0051] The fourth method of the present invention is not particularly limited if it is a
method using a reaction system including the formation reaction of a detectable substance
insoluble in a reaction solvent or an insoluble by-product.
[0052] The measuring method of the present invention is used in a method of detecting and
determining an analyte, preferably a biological component in the body fluid such as
urine and blood, a trace amount of a substance existent in food, medicine, or natural
environment, an industrial chemical substance, or a trace amount of a substance contained
in waste, from a sample containing the same.
[0053] The present invention provides a analytical testing piece for measuring an analyte
by measuring a detectable substance by using a reaction system including a formation
reaction of the detectable substance based on a chemical reaction of the analyte contained
in a sample, wherein the testing piece comprises at least one test portion having
a detection portion for detecting the detectable substance and contains a layered
inorganic compound at least in the, test portion. The testing piece will be referred
to as "testing piece of the present invention" hereinafter.
[0054] The testing piece of the present invention may comprise at least one test portion
composed of two or more layers including a detection layer for detecting a detectable
substance as the detection portion and contain the layered inorganic compound at least
in the detection layer. The testing piece of the present invention may be one in which
the test portion further include a diffusion layer for diffusing a sample so that
the sample passes through the diffusion layer to be diffused and reaches the detection
layer. The testing piece of the present invention may comprise at least one test portion
having a detection area for detecting the detectable substance as the detection portion
and contain the layered inorganic compound at least in the detection area. The testing
piece of the present invention may be one in which the test portion has a diffusion
area for diffusing the sample so that the sample passes through the diffusion area
to be diffused and reaches the detection area. Further, the testing piece of the present
invention may be one in which the detection area composed of at least two layers including
a detection layer for detecting the detectable substance. Moreover, the testing piece
of the present invention may be one in which the test portion has a reaction portion
where the analyte contained in the sample reacts with a reagent react, and the detectable
substance is formed in the reaction portion. Further, the testing piece of the present
invention may be one in which the detection portion is provided at a location which
the sample reaches after the sample is diffused and passes through the reaction portion.
Still further, the testing piece of the present invention may be one in which the
detectable substance is formed by a reaction between the analyte contained in the
sample and a reagent in the detection portion.
[0055] In the testing piece of the present invention, it is considered that a dyestuff or
the like formed by a reaction between an analyte and a reagent is adsorbed to a layered
inorganic compound by including the layered inorganic compound in the test portion
with the result that the diffusion or elution of the dyestuff or the like by a sample
solution or a reaction solution can be suppressed, and highly sensitive and highly
accurate analysis is made possible.
[0056] The testing piece of the present invention is applied to a method for analyzing a
component contained in a liquid using a solid phase, particularly analysis of glucose,
bilirubin or the like contained in urine. In the analysis of the component contained
in the liquid, a dyestuff or the like formed by a reaction between an analyte and
,a reagent may readily dissolve in a sample, diffuse and elute. Therefore, the testing
piece of the present invention is effective.
[0057] The reagent is not particularly limited if it causes a detectable reaction with an
analyte. It is preferably a reagent capable of forming a detectable substance such
as a dyestuff compound, an oxidized/reduced form of an electron carrier or a complex
compound of an ionophore and an ion by reacting with the analyte. The formation reaction
of a dyestuff compound may be any reaction if it forms an optical detectable substance.
It may be a reaction which causes not only color development but also color change,
fluorescence and emission. When the formed dyestuff compound or the like is water-soluble,
it is often diffused and eluted by a sample solution, a reaction solution or the like.
Therefore, the testing piece of the present invention is particularly preferably applied
to a method using a reagent for forming such a water-soluble dyestuff compound.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0058]
Fig. 1 shows absorption spectra measured in Example 1.
Fig. 2 shows the calibration curves of hydrogen peroxide obtained in Examples 2 and
3.
Fig. 3 shows logarithmic representation in both the axis of ordinate and the axis
of abscissa of the calibration curves of Fig. 2.
Fig. 4 shows time-cource of absorbance after the addition of hydrogen peroxide in
Example 4.
Fig. 5 shows absorption spectra measured in Example 5.
Fig. 6 shows the calibration curves of the concentration of ascorbic acid obtained
in Example 6.
Fig. 7 shows absorption spectra (smectite-added system) measured in Example 7.
Fig. 8 shows absorption spectra (smectite-non-added system) measured in Example 7.
Fig. 9 shows absorption spectra (smectite-added system and non-added system) at a
sodium nitrite concentration of 33 µmol/l measured in Example 7.
Fig. 10 shows the calibration curves of the concentration of sodium nitrite obtained
in Example 8.
Fig. 11 shows time-cource of absorbance in experiments showing a smectite addition
effect in a POD color developing system conducted in Example 9.
Fig. 12 shows time-cource of absorbance in experiments showing a smectite addition
effect in a POD color developing system containing ascorbic acid conducted in Example
10.
Fig. 13 is an enlarged view of a section for 0 to 60 seconds of Fig. 12.
Fig. 14 shows time-cource of absorbance measured in Example 11.
Fig. 15 shows time-cource of absorbance in a smectite-non-added system measured in
Example 12.
Fig. 16 shows time-cource of absorbance in a smectite-added system measured in Example
12.
Fig. 17 shows time-cource of absorbance in a smectite-added system and a smectite-non-added
system when the concentration of sodium nitrite is 25.0 µmol/l measured in Example
12.
Fig. 18 schematically shows the diffusion state of a dyestuff on smectite-impregnated
filter paper in Example 13.
Fig. 19 schematically shows the diffusion state of a dyestuff on untreated filter
paper in Example 13.
Fig. 20 schematically shows a reaction cell in Example 15.
Fig. 21 schematically shows a testing piece in Example 16.
Fig. 22 schematically shows a testing piece in Example 17.
[0059] In these figures, reference numeral 1 is a case where smectite is added, 2 is a case
where smectite is not added and 3 is a case where smectite is added and hydrogen peroxide
is not added. 4 is a case where the concentration of nitrous acid is 33 µmol/l, 5
is a case where the concentration of nitrous acid is 16 µmol/l, 6 is a case where
the concentration of nitrous acid is 8 µmol/l, and 7 is a case where the concentration
of nitrous acid is 0 µmol/l. 8 is sample No. 1, 9 is sample No. 2, 10 is sample No.
3, 11 is sample No. 4, and 12 is sample No. 5. 13 is a case where the concentration
of sodium nitrite is 50.0 µmol/l, 14 is a case where the concentration of sodium nitrite
is 25.0 µmol/l, 15 is a case where the concentration of sodium nitrite is 12.5 µmol/l,
16 is a case where the concentration of sodium nitrite is 6.3 µmol/l, and 17 is a
case where the concentration of sodium nitrite is 1.6 µmol/l. 18 is a spot of a dyestuff,
19 is a color developing solution from which a dyestuff is removed, 20 is glass, 21
is a coating film, and 22 is PET. 23 is filter paper impregnated with a reagent (detection
layer), 24 is adhesive double-coated tape (adhesive layer), 25 is filter paper impregnated
with a dispersion of a layered inorganic compound, 26 is filter paper impregnated
with a reagent and 27 is filter paper. 28 is a sample suction area, 29 is a diffusion
area, 30 is a reaction area, 31 is an area for controlling reaction time, 32 is a
holding area and 33 is an area for absorbing excess of a sample.
Best Mode for Carrying Out the Invention
I. Measuring method of the present invention
[0060] The measuring method of the present invention is a method for measuring an analyte
by measuring a detectable substance by using a reaction system including the formation
reaction of the detectable substance based on the chemical reaction of the analyte
contained in a sample.
1. Detectable substance
[0061] The reaction system used in the present invention includes the formation reaction
of the detectable substance as shown below.
[0062] The detectable substance is not particularly limited if it can be adsorbed by the
layered inorganic compound according to the present invention. Examples of the detectable
substance which can be adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound include amines such
as amine and polyamine; imines such as imine and polyimine; polyenes; aromatic compounds
such as aniline derivatives, benzoquinone derivatives and aromatic condensed ring
compounds; heterocyclic compounds such as xantene, azine and thiazine; complexes between
ions and cyclic ligands such as crown ether and valinomycin; and the like. These substances
may contain a quaternary nitrogen atom, phenolic hydroxyl group, sulfonic acid group
or carboxyl group in the molecule.
[0063] The substance which can be adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound is detailed
in, for example, Chapter XI "Interaction of Clays and Organic Compounds" of "An Introduction
to Clay Colloid Chemistry, Second Edition" written by H. Van Olphen (Krieger Publishment,
Malabar). Japanese Patent Publication No. 50-8462(1975) (Tadayoshi Kato) introduces
many adsorbable compounds. They include substances which can be detected by an optical
method and an electrochemical method.
(1) Substances which can be detected by an optical method
[0064] Substances which can be detected by an optical method include dyestuffs. The dyestuffs
include fluorescent dyestuffs, luminescent substances and the like. The formation
reaction of the dyestuff may be the formation reaction of an optically detectable
substance, for example, a reaction causing color development, color change, fluorescence,
light emission or the like.
[0065] Preferred dyestuffs include dyestuff compounds, fluorescent substances and luminescent
substances formed from dyestuff precursors by various coloration reactions such as
an oxidation-reduction reaction, an acid-base reaction and a condensation reaction,
dyestuff complexes and fluorescent complexes formed by coordinate bonding or ion bonding,
and the like.
[0066] Preferred dyestuffs formed by an oxidation-reduction reaction are compounds having
a conjugate system such as an aromatic ring, such as dyestuffs formed by the oxidation
condensation of a coupler such as 4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one(4-aminoantipyrin:
to be abbreviated as 4-AA hereinafter) and a hydrogen donor (Trinder's reagent such
as N-ethyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline); color-producing dyestuffs by oxidation
such as o-tolidine and benzidines (such as 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine); dyestuffs
formed by the oxidation of leuco substances such as 2,6-dichloro-4-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one;
fluorescent substances formed by the oxidation of 4-hydroxyphenyl acetate; luminescent
substances such as chemiluminescent substances and exciting substances thereof; formazans
which are reducing dyestuffs of tetrazolium salts; dyestuffs formed by the reduction
of 1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium salts and the like; and the like.
[0067] The hydrogen donor is a compound such as phenol which forms a quinone dyestuff when
it is condensed with 4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one(4-AA)
or 3-methyl-2-benzothiazoline hydrazone by the function of peroxidase in the presence
of hydrogen peroxide. Examples of the hydrogen donor include dichlorophenol, o-methoxyphenol,
1,2,3-trihydroxybenzene, dimethylaniline, N-ethyl-N-sulfopropyl-m-anisidine, N-ethyl-N-sulfopropylaniline,
N-ethyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline, N-ethyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline,
N-ethyl-N-sulfopropyl-m-toluidine, N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-m-anisidine,
N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)aniline, N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline,
N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline, N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline,
N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-m-toluidine, N-(3-sulfopropyl)aniline and the
like.
[0068] In a method using a reaction system which forms a quinone dyestuff by a reaction
between the above 4-AA and a hydrogen donor in the presence of hydrogen peroxide,
an analyte is measured by measuring hydrogen peroxide indirectly by measuring the
formed quinone dyestuff with an absorptiometer.
[0069] o-Tolidine and benzidines include o-tolidine, dianisidine, 3,3'-diaminobenzidine,
3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine, N-(3-sulfopropyl)-3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine and
the like.
[0070] The leuco substance is an achromatic dyestuff precursor which becomes a dyestuff
and develops color when it is oxidized. Examples of the dyestuff obtained by oxidizing
the leuco substance include 2,6-dichloro-4-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one,
2,6-dichloro-4-[(3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one, 7-(diethylamino)-3-imino-8-methyl-3H-phenoxazine
salt, 3-(diethylamino)-7-amino-5-phenylphenazinium salt, 3,7-bis(dimethylamino)-phenothiazin-5-ium
salt, 1-hydroxy-5-methylphenazinium salt, and 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one-10-oxide.
Examples of the leuco substance include 4,4'-benzylidenebis(N,N-dimethylaniline),
4,4'-bis[N-ethyl-N-(3-sulfopropylamino)-2,6-dimethylphenyl]methane, 1-(ethylaminothiocarbonyl)-2-(3,5-dimethoxy-4-hydroxyphenyl)-4,5-bis(4-diethylaminophenyl)imidazole,
4,4'-bis(dimethylamino)diphenylamine, N-(carboxymethylaminocarbonyl)-4,4'-bis(dimethylamino)-diphenylamine
salt, 10-(carboxymethylaminocarbonyl)-3,7-bis(dimethylamino)phenothiazine salt and
the like.
[0071] Other examples of the dyestuff precursor which develops color when it is oxidized
include 4-methoxyphenol, 4-ethoxyphenol, 2-ethoxyphenol, 1-(2-hydroxy-5-methoxyphenyl)ethanone,
2-hydroxy-5-methoxybenzoic acid, 2-hydroxy-5-methoxybenzaldehyde, 2-hydroxy-5-methoxymethoxybenzoic
acid, 4-methoxy-2-nitrophenol, 2-chloro-4-methoxyphenol, 4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzaldehyde,
4-hydroxy-3-methoxybenzoic acid and the like.
[0072] 3-(4-Hydroxyphenyl)-2-propenoic acid, 2-hydroxyphenylacetic acid, 3-hydroxyphenylacetic
acid, 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid, 3-hydroxybenzoic acid, 4-hydroxybenzoic acid, 2-aminobenzoic
acid, 3-aminobenzoic acid, 4-aminobenzoic acid, 3,4-diaminobenzoic acid, 3,5-diaminobenzoic
acid, 4-amino-2-chlorobenzoic acid, 4-amino-3-methylbenzoic acid, 4-amino-3-methoxybenzoic
acid, 4-aminophthalic acid and the like are further included in the above examples.
[0073] 2,4-Diamino-6-hydroxypyrimidine, 4,5-diamino-6-hydroxypyrimidine, 4-amino-2,6-dihydroxypyrimidine,
6-hydroxy-2,4,5-triaminopyrimidine, 4,5-diamino-2,6-dihydroxypyrimidine, 4-amino-6-hydroxy-2-methylpyrimidine,
4-amino-6-hydroxypyrimidine, 4-amino-6-hydroxy-2-methoxypyrimidine and the like are
also included.
[0074] Fluorescent substances may be formed by oxidizing 4-hydroxyphenylacetic acid and
the like. Examples thereof include fluorescent substances formed by oxidizing 4-hydroxyphenylacetic
acid, (4-hydroxy-3-methoxypehnyl)acetic acid, 3-(4-hydroxyphenyl)propionic acid, 4-hydroxy-(2-aminoethyl)-phenol,
4-hydroxy-N,N,N-trimethylbenzenemetaminium, α-amino-p-hydroxyhydrocinnamic acid, 4-hydroxyphenethylamine,
N-(4-hydroxyphenyl)acetoanilide, 2,7-dichlorofluorescein diacetate and the like.
[0075] Luminescent substances such as chemiluminescent substances include firefly luciferin,
Cypridina luciferin, aequorin, lucigenin derivatives, luminol derivatives, acridinium
esters, peroxalic acid esters and the like.
[0076] For example, in the above method using a reaction system in which the benzidine or
leuco substance is oxidized in the presence of hydrogen peroxide and develops color,
an analyte is measured by measuring hydrogen peroxide indirectly by measuring the
formed dyestuff with an absorptiometer.
[0077] In the above method using a reaction system in which a fluorescent substance or a
luminescent substance is formed, an analyte is measured by measuring hydrogen peroxide
indirectly with a fluorophotometer or a luminophotometer.
[0078] In the oxidation reaction which forms a dyestuff, an oxidizing agent used for the
oxidation reaction is not limited to hydrogen peroxide but various known oxidizing
agents may be used. An oxidizing enzyme such as peroxidase may be added. Prior to
the oxidation reaction which forms a dyestuff, a reaction for forming the oxidizing
agent may take place.
[0079] The tetrazolium salts include 2,3,5-triphenyltetrazolium salt, 2,5-diphenyl-3-(1-naphthyl)-2H-tetrazolium
salt, 3,3'-(3,3'-dimethoxy-4,4'-biphenylene)-bis[2-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyl-2H-tetrazolium]salt,
3,3'-[3,3'-dimethoxy-(1,1'-biphenyl)-4,4'-diyl]-bis(2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium)salt,
2-(4-iodophenyl)-3-(4-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyl-2H-tetrazolium salt, 2-(4-iodophenyl)-3-(4-nitrophenyl)-5-(2,4-disulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium
salt, 2-(4-iodophenyl)-3-(2,4-dinitrophenyl)-5-(2,4-disulfophenyl)-2H-tetrazolium
salt, 3,3'-(1,1'-biphenyl-4,4'-diyl)-bis(2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium)salt, 3-(4,5-dimethyl-2-thiazolyl)-2,5-diphenyl-2H-tetrazolium
salt and the like.
[0080] The dyestuffs formed by reduction include reduced forms of 1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium
salt, 1,1'-dibenzyl-4,4'-bipyridinium salt and the like. Fluorescent substances may
be formed by reducing 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one-10-oxide and the like. Examples
thereof include fluorescent substances formed by reducing 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one-10-oxide,
5-cyano-2,3-bis(4-methylphenyl)-2H-tetrazolium salt, 2,3-bis(4-cyanophenyl)-5-cyano-2H-tetrazolium
salt and the like.
[0081] For example, in the above method using a reaction system in which the tetrazolium
salt or the leuco substance is reduced in the presence of a reducing agent and develops
color, an analyte is measured by measuring the reducing agent indirectly by measuring
the formed dyestuff with a colorimenter or fluorophotometer. Prior to the reduction
reaction which forms a dyestuff, a reaction for forming a reducing agent may take
place.
[0082] In the above reduction reaction which forms a dyestuff, nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
or nicotineamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate is preferably used as the reducing
agent used for the reduction reaction. However, the present invention is not limited
to this but various known reducing agents may be used.
[0083] Dyestuffs formed by an acid-base reaction include compounds which develop color or
change their colors by pH variations, such as Bromocresol Green. The compounds include
sulfone phthalein dyestuffs such as Bromophenol Blue, Phenol Red, Bromopyrogallol
Red and Pyrogallol Red; triphenylmethane dyestuffs such as Malachite Green and rosolic
acid; quinoline dyestuffs such as Quinaldine Red, N-(p-hydroxyphenyl)-2,6-dichloro-p-benzoquinoneimine;
oxazone dyestuffs such as 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one 10-oxide; coumarin dyestuffs
such as 6,7-dihydroxy-4-methylcoumarin; conductive polymer compounds such as aniline
oligomer, and the like, in addition to Bromocresol Green.
[0084] For example, in the method using a reaction system in which a compound which develops
color or changes in color by pH variations develops color or changes its color by
an acid or a base, an analyte is measured by measuring an acid or base indirectly
by measuring the formed dyestuff with an absorptiometer. In the method using a reaction
system in which a compound which develops color or changes in color by pH variations
develops color or changes its color by hydrogen ions, an analyte is measured by measuring
the concentration of hydrogen ions by measuring the formed dyestuff with an absorptiometer.
[0085] Other dyestuffs which are formed by various reactions known as a coloration reaction
and the like include azo dyestuffs formed by the coupling of a diazonium salt such
as 2-methoxy-4-morpholinobenzenediazonium salt; dyestuffs formed by various known
coloration reactions such as a reaction between aldehyde and 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-bis(hydroxyamino)butane;
fluorescent substances formed by various known reactions such as a reaction between
histamine and o-phthalaldehyde; and dyestuffs and fluorescent substances formed by
the reaction of an enzyme substrate such as 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate by an enzyme.
[0086] The azo dyestuffs formed by the coupling of a diazonium salt include azo dyestuff
formed by coupling between indoxyl and 2-methoxy-4-morpholinobenzenediazonium salt,
azo dyestuff formed by coupling between urobilinogen and 3,3'-dimethoxybiphenyl-4,4'-diazonium
salt, azo dyestuff formed by a reaction between 4-aminobenzenearsonic acid and N-1-naphthylethylene
diamine in the presence of a nitrite, azo dyestuff formed by a reaction between 2,4-dichloroaniline
and N,N-diethyl-N'-1-naphthylnaphthylethylene diamine oxalate in the presence of a
nitrite, and the like.
[0087] In the above method using a reaction system in which an azo dyestuff is formed, an
analyte (indoxyl, urobilinogen and nitrite in the above examples) as the starting
substance of a reaction is measured by measuring the formed dyestuff with an absorptiometer
or the like. The formation reaction of an azo dyestuff is not limited to the above
examples but various known formation reactions of azo dyestuffs are suitably applied.
[0088] Dyestuffs formed by various known coloration reactions include dyestuffs formed by
the following known coloration reactions, but the present invention is not limited
to these as a matter of course. The coloration reactions include a reaction between
hydrogen peroxide and 1,4-diaminobenzene for detecting aldehyde, the reaction of 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-bis(hydroxyamino)butane
for detecting aldehyde, a reaction between 3-methyl-2-benzothiazolinonehydrazone and
an oxidizing agent for detecting aldehyde, a reaction between 10H-phenothiazine and
bromine for detecting secondary amine, the reaction of 2,2'-dithiodipyridine for detecting
thiol and the like.
[0089] In the above method using a known coloration reaction, an analyte (aldehyde, secondary
amine and thiol in the above examples) as the starting substance of a reaction is
measured by measuring the formed dyestuff with an absorptiometer or the like. The
known coloration reaction usable is not limited to the above examples as a matter
of course.
[0090] Fluorescent substances formed by various known reactions include fluorescent substances
formed by known detection reactions which are carried out using the following reagents.
However, the present invention is not limited to these as a matter of course. The
reagents used in the detection reactions which form fluorescent substances include
2-hydroxy-1,2-diphenylethanone for detecting a guanidino compound, o-phthalaldehyde
for detecting histamine, o-phthalaldehyde for detecting spermidine, 1,2-diamino-4,5-dimethoxybenzene
for detecting α-keto acid and the like.
[0091] In the above method using a known detection reaction, an analyte (guanidino compound,
histamine, spermidine and α-keto acid in the above examples) as the starting substance
of a reaction is measured by measuring the formed fluorescent substances with a fluorophotometer
or the like. The known detection reaction usable is not limited to the above examples
as a matter of course.
[0092] Enzyme substrates which form dyestuffs and fluorescent substances when they react
in the presence of enzymes include N-tosyl-L-phenylalanine-2-amidoacridone as the
substrate of chymotrypsin, L-alanine-2-amidoacridone as the substrate of aminopeptidase,
7-acetoxy-N-methylquinolinium salt for measuring esterase, 7-acetoxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one
as the substrate of esterase, 4-methylumbelliferyl phosphate as the substrate of phosphatase,
5,10,15,20-tetrakis(4-phosphonooxyphenyl)porphine as the substrate of phosphatase
and the like. The present invention is not limited to these as a matter of course.
[0093] For example, in the above method using a reaction in which an enzyme substrate is
decomposed by an enzyme, an analyte is measured by measuring an enzyme indirectly
by measuring the formed dyestuff or the fluorescent substance with an absorptiometer
or a fluorophotometer. The enzyme or the enzyme substrate may be chemically bonded
to an antibody or a fragment thereof, for example.
[0094] Dyestuff complexes and fluorescent complexes formed by coordinate bonding and ion
bonding include compounds which develop color or change their colors, such as dyestuffs
and fluorescent substances produced by forming complexes by ion bonding or coordinate
bonding between a metal ion or anion and a compound such as a ligand. The compounds
which develop color or change their colors and form complexes with a metal ion include
compounds known as metal indicators and chromoionophores and compounds which are colored
by forming complexes with a colored transition metal ion. Specifically, the compounds
include ethylene diamine tetraacetic acid, 2,2-bipyridine, 1-hydroxy-2-(2-hydroxyphenylazo)benzene,
dibenzo-18-crown-6, dicyclohexyl-18-crown-6, cyclic polyamines, calix[4]arene, 3-[N,N-bis-(carboxymethyl)aminomethyl]-1,2-dihydroxyanthraquinone,
5',5''-dibromopyrogallolsulfone phthalein, 2-hydroxy-1-(1-hydroxy-2-naphthylazo)-6-nitro-4-naphthalene
sulfonate, 2,6-dichloro-4'-hydroxy-3,3''-dimethylfuchsone-5',5''-dicarboxylate, 3,3'-bis[N,N-bis-(carboxymethyl)aminomethyl]fluorescein,
8-[N,N-bis(carboxymethyl)aminomethyl]-4-methylumbelliferone, 2,7-bis(2-arsonophenylazo)-1,8-dihydrox,y-3,6-naphthalene
disulfonic acid, 5-chloro-2-hydroxy-3-(2,4-dihydroxyphenylazo)benzenesulfonic acid,
5-[(hexahydro-2,4,6-trioxo-5-pyrimidinyl)imino]-2,4,6-(1H,3H,5H)-pyrimidinetrione
salt, 2-(5-bromo-2-pyridylazo)-5-[N-propyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)amino]aniline salt, 1,8-dihydroxy-2-(2-pyridylazo)-3,6-naphthalene
disulfonate, 2-nitroso-5-[N-propyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)amino]phenol and the like.
[0095] Compounds which form colored complexes with monovalent cations specifically include
tetrakis[3,5bis-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl] borate salt, tetraphenylphosphonium salt
and the like.
[0096] Compounds which form fluorescent complexes with calcium ions specifically include
1-[2-amino-5-(2,7-dichloro-6-hydroxy-3-oxy-9-xanthenyl)phenoxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate,
1-[2-amino-5-(2,7-dichloro-6-hydroxy-3-oxy-9-xanthenyl)phenoxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid-pentaacetoxymethyl ester, 1-[6-amino-2-(5-carboxy-2-oxazoyl)-5-benzofuranyloxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate,
1-[6-amino-2-(5-carboxy-2-oxazoyl)-5-benzofuranyloxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid-pentaacetoxymethyl ester, 1-[2-amino-5-(6-carboxy-2-indolyl)phenoxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate,
1-[2-amino-5-(6-carboxy-2-indolyl)phenoxy]-2-(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)ethane-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid-pentaacetoxymethyl ester, 8-amino-2-[(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)methyl]-6-methoxyquinoline-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetate,
8-amino-2-[(2-amino-5-methylphenoxy)methyl]-6-methoxyquinoline-N,N,N',N'-tetraacetic
acid-pentaacetoxymethyl ester, 3,3'-bis[N,N-bis(carboxymethyl)aminomethyl]fluorescein,
8-[N,N-bis(carboxymethyl)aminomethyl]-4-methylumbelliferone and the like.
[0097] Further, a tetraphenylarsonium salt which forms a colored complex with an anion,
N-ethoxycarbonylmethyl-6-methoxyquinolinium bromide whose fluorescent intensity is
reduced when it forms a complex with a chloride ion, 8-hydroxy-1-(salicylideneamino)-3,6-naphthalene
disulfonate which forms a complex with boron and the like are also included.
[0098] In the above method using the formation reaction of a complex, an analyte (ions in
most cases) is measured by measuring the amount of a dyestuff or a fluorescent substance
formed by an ion and a ligand with an absorptiometer or a fluorophotometer.
(2) Electrochemically detectable substances
[0099] A description is subsequently given of electrochemically detectable substances.
[0100] Substances which can be detected by electrochemical methods include electron carriers
(mediators) and complexes between ionophores and ions.
[0101] The electron carrier is a chemical substance which oxidizes/reduces an analyte with
an enzyme or the like and receives/gives electrons directly from/to the analyte at
the same time. The analyte can be measured from electrochemical response when the
oxidized/reduced form of the electron carrier is oxidized/reduced by an electrode.
The electron carrier does not need to receive/give electrons directly from/to the
analyte and may be a chemical substance which oxidizes/reduces the analyte with an
enzyme or the like and receives/gives electrons indirectly from/to the analyte at
the same time. The analyte is measured from electrochemical response when the oxidized/reduced
form of the electron carrier having quantitative relationship with the analyte is
reduced/oxidized by an electrode.
[0102] The electron carrier is preferably oxidized/reduced by a potential within a range
which can be measured by the used electrode (generally -1.2 V to +1.0 V in the case
of a carbon electrode). The electron carrier is exemplified by 1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium
salt, 1,1'-dibenzyl-4,4'-bipyridinium salt, 1,4-diaminobenzene, 2-methyl-1,4-naphthoquinone,
N-methylphenazinium salt, 1-hydroxy-5-methylphenazinium salt, 1-methoxy-5-methyl-phenazinium
salt, 9-dimethylaminobenzo-α-phenoxazin-7-ium salt, ferrocene derivative, hexacyano
iron(II) salt, 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one-10-oxide, 3,7-diamino-5-phenylphenazinium
salt, 3-(diethylamino)-7-amino-5-phenylphenazinium salt, 1,4-benzenediol, 1,4-dihydroxy-2,3,5-trimethylbenzene,
N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-1,4-benzenediamine, Δ2,2'-bi-1,3-dithiol, 2,6-dimethylbenzoquinone,
2,5-dimethylbenzoquinone, 2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-2,5-cyclohexadiene-1,4-dione, 2,6-dichloro-4-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one,
2,6-dichloro-4-[(3-chloro-4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one, 7-(diethylamino)-3-imino-8-methyl-3H-phenoxazine
salt, 3,7-bis(dimethylamino)-phenothiazine-5-ium salt and the like.
[0103] Detectable substances in this case are oxidized/reduced forms of the above electron
carriers, and the formation reaction of these detectable substances is the oxidation/reduction
reaction of the electron carriers. As described above, an analyte can be measured
by measuring electrochemical response such as an oxidation/reduction current when
the oxidized/reduced form of an electron carrier existent having quantitative relationship
with the analyte is reduced/oxidized by an electrode. For example, the analyte can
be indirectly measured from the result of electrochemical response measured when the
electron carrier is oxidized/reduced on an electrode as an electron donor/receptor
like ascorbic acid or hydrogen peroxide.
[0104] The ionophore is a compound such as a ligand which is coordinately bonded or ion
bonded selectively to a specific ion as an analyte to become a complex and it is particularly
well known that the ionophore is used in a liquid film electrode.
[0105] Examples of the ionophore which forms a complex with a cation include tetrakis[3,5bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl)borate
salt, tetraphenylphosphonium salt, valinomycin, cyclo(N',N'-dioctyl-D-asparaginyl-L-prolyl-L-alanyl)
2, bis (benzo-15-crown-5), bis[(benzo-15-crown-5)-4-methyl]pimelate, bis(12-crown-4),
bis[(12-crown-4)methyl]-2-dodecyl-2-methylmalonate, 14-crown-4, dodecyl-methyl-14-crown-4,
6,6-dibenzyl-1,4,8,11-tetraoxacyclotetradecane, dibenzo-18-crown-6, dicyclohexyl-18-crown-6,
4,16-di-N-octadecylcarbamoyl-3-oxabutyryl-1,7,10,13,19-pentaoxa-4, 16-diazacyclohenicosane
and the like.
[0106] Examples of the ionophore which forms a complex with an anion include tetraphenylarsonium
salt, 6-methoxy-N-(3-sulfopropyl)quinolinium salt and the like.
[0107] The liquid film electrode is used in a method of measuring a specific ion as an analyte,
by measuring a membrane potential produced when a porous polymer layer is formed on
the surface of an electrode, and an ionophore is infiltrated into the polymer layer,
bonded to the specific ion contained in a sample and moved in the polymer layer to
selectively separate the specific ion. It is a matter of course that the use of the
ionophore in the electrochemical detection method is not limited to this liquid film
electrode.
[0108] A specific ion as an analyte can be measured by measuring a membrane potential produced
when the specific ion is bonded to an ionophore in a bulk solution and the ion is
selectively separated in an electrode having a polymer layer in which unbonded ions
cannot move and only a complex produced by bonding can move.
[0109] In this case, the detectable substance is a complex between the ionophore and the
specific ion, and the formation reaction of the detectable substance is a complex
formation reaction between the ionophore and the specific ion by coordinate bonding
or ion bonding. An analyte is measured by electrochemically measuring a membrane potential
produced according to the concentration of a specific ion which is the analyte as
described above.
2. Measuring method which the present invention is applied to
[0110] The measuring method of the present invention is preferably applied to the method
using a reaction system which forms such a detectable substance, more preferably to
the following methods.
(a) A method using a reaction system including the formation reaction of hydrogen
peroxide or an oxidization reaction using hydrogen peroxide as an oxidizing agent,
specifically a method for measuring a dyestuff compound produced by forming hydrogen
peroxide from an analyte through an oxidase reaction system and carrying out an oxidation-reduction
reaction between the hydrogen peroxide and a reactive color producer (dyestuff precursor)
in the presence of peroxidase.
(b) A method using a reaction system including the formation reaction of nicotinamide
adenine dinucleotide (NADH) or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)
or a reaction using NADH or NADPH as a reducing agent, specifically a method for measuring
a dyestuff compound produced by forming NADH or NADPH from an analyte through a dehydrogenase
reaction system and reducing it by making it act on a dyestuff precursor in the presence
of an electron carrier.
(c) A method for measuring a nitrite, diazonium salt or coupling compound by producing
a diazonium salt by allowing a nitrite to react with an aromatic primary amine under
an acidic condition to produce a diazonium salt, allowing the produced diazonium salt
to react with a reagent to be coupled to produce an azo dyestuff and measuring the
produced azo dyestuff.
(d) A method for measuring a substance labeled with a fluorescent enzyme substrate
or an alkali phosphatase by measuring fluorescence generated by producing a fluorescent
substance by isolating a phosphate from a fluorescent enzyme substrate such as 4-methylumbelliferone
having a phosphoric acid ester by the function of alkali phosphatase and irradiating
the fluorescent substance with excitation light.
(e) A method for measuring an oxidase/reductase and a substance labeled with an oxidase/reductase
by measuring a current response when a mediator such as 1,4-diaminobenzene is oxidized/reduced
by the oxidase/reductase and the produced oxidized/reduced form of the mediator is
reduced/oxidized by an electrode reaction.
[0111] The detectable substance may be the analyte. As an example thereof, an analyte is
measured by measuring electrochemical response when glucose dissolved in water is
oxidized on the surface of an electrode.
[0112] The fourth measuring method of the present invention may be particularly a measuring
method using a reaction system which forms a detectable substance in a solvent and
including the formation reaction of a substance insoluble in the solvent, preferably
to a measuring method in which an insoluble detectable substance is formed, particularly
preferably to a measuring method in which the detectable substance is an optically
detectable substance.
[0113] The solvent is not particularly limited and conventionally known solvents can be
used. Examples of the solvent include water such as distilled water, alcohols such
as ethanol, ketones such as acetone, ethers such as diethyl ether, esters such as
ethyl acetate, halogenated hydrocarbons such as chloroform, aromatic hydrocarbons
such as benzene and toluene, and the like. A solvent suitable for an analyte and a
detection reaction system thereof can be selected from these. Out of these, water
is preferred. It is known in dry chemistry that a sample liquid such as blood, saliva
and urine containing an analyte can be used as a reaction solvent.
[0114] The measuring method using the formation reaction of a substance insoluble in a reaction
solvent in which the reaction is carried out is not particularly limited. Examples
thereof include a method using a reaction which forms an optically detectable substance
insoluble in a reaction solvent, a method using a reaction which forms an optically
detectable substance and a by-product insoluble in a solvent in which the reaction
is carried out, and a method using a reaction which forms an electrochemically detectable
substance and a by-product insoluble in a reaction solvent.
[0115] The measuring method using a reaction which forms an optically detectable substance
insoluble in a reaction solvent is not particularly limited but it may be one of the
following detection reactions.
[0116] Oxidation reactions include a reaction for detecting hydrogen peroxide by the oxidation
condensation of phenol and 4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one
in an aqueous solution, a reaction for detecting hydrogen peroxide which forms N-methylacridone,
a fluorescent substance insoluble in water, by oxidizing N-methylacridine-9-carboxylate
in an aqueous solution, a reaction for detecting hydrogen peroxide comprising a reaction
for oxidizing an aqueous solution of 10-(carboxymethylaminocarbonyl)-3,7-bis(dimethylamino)phenothiazine
salt in the presence of alkane sulfonate and causing it to develop color, and the
like.
[0117] Reduction reactions include a reaction for detecting a reducing substance which forms
7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one, a fluorescent substance insoluble in an acidic aqueous
solution by reducing 7-hydroxy-3H-phenoxazin-3-one-10-oxide, a reaction for detecting
a reducing substance which forms a formazan dyestuff insoluble in water by reducing
3,3'-(3,3'-dimethoxy-4,4'-biphenylene)-bis[2-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyl-2H-tetrazolium]salt,
5-cyano-2,3-bis(4-methylphenyl)-2H-tetrazolium salt, 2,3-bis(4-cyanophenyl)-5-cyano-2H-tetrazolium
salt or the like, and the like.
[0118] Other reactions include a reaction for detecting allyl sulfatase through a reaction
between 4-methylumbelliferyl sulfate and aryl sulfatase in a weak acidic aqueous solution,
a reaction for detecting β-glucosidase through a reaction between 2-chloro-4-nitrophenyl-β-D-glucopyranoside
and β-glucosidase in an aqueous solution, a reaction for detecting aldehyde through
a condensation reaction between azobenzene-p-phenylhydrazinesulfonic acid and aldehyde,
a reaction for detecting nitrous acid including diazo coupling between a diazonium
salt and 2-naphthol, a reaction for detecting a cobalt ion through a colored insoluble
complex formation reaction between 1,3-diamino-4-(5-bromo-2-pyridylazo)benzene and
a cobalt ion in a neutral aqueous solution, and the like.
[0119] The measuring method using the formation reaction of an optically detectable substance,
which includes the formation reaction of a by-product insoluble in a reaction solvent,
or the measuring method using the formation reaction of an electrochemically detectable
substance, which includes the formation reaction of a by-product insoluble in a reaction
solvent is rarely used because of inconvenience described in the above section of
the related art. Therefore, examples of the above measuring methods are not enumerated
herein. However, it is to be understood that the present invention is not limited
by this.
[0120] It is a usually observed phenomenon that an insoluble substance separates out from
a liquid phase immediately and is adsorbed to a solid phase nearby when it is formed
in a solvent that does not dissolve it. If the solid phase does not exist nearby,
the insoluble substance forms an assembly of molecules in a liquid phase, the assembly
of molecules further grows and settles as an aggregate or precipitate. The layered
inorganic compound of the present invention is a fine particle which is fine enough
to be uniformly dispersed. Since insoluble detectable substances such as an insoluble
detectable substance and a by-product in the present invention are a single molecule
or a very small assembly of molecules immediately after they are formed, the insoluble
substances are efficiently adsorbed to the layered inorganic compound and uniformly.dispersed
together.
[0121] The fourth measuring method of the present invention is a measuring method which
causes a layered inorganic compound having a function to adsorb various kinds of substances
and disperse uniformly to exist in a detection reaction system which forms an insoluble
substance, thereby adsorbing the insoluble substance, and which overcomes such inconvenience
produced by the insoluble substance as described in the section of the related art.
In addition, the existence of the layered inorganic compound does not interrupt the
proceeding of a detection reaction and detection. In the fourth measuring method of
the present invention, the reaction system including the formation reaction of an
insoluble substance is particularly preferably the reduction reaction of a tetrazolium
salt.
[0122] Examples of the analyte which can be measured by the first to fourth measuring methods
of the present invention include biological components in the body fluid such as urine
and blood, trace amounts of substances existent in foods, medicines, or natural environment,
industrial chemical substances, trace amounts of substances contained in waste, and
the like.
3. Layered inorganic compound
[0123] The measuring method of the present invention is characterized in that a layered
inorganic compound is caused to exist in the reaction system including the formation
reaction of the detectable substance. A description is subsequently given of the layered
inorganic compound.
[0124] The layered inorganic compound used in the present invention is an inorganic compound
having a crystal structure of sheet-structured layers piled up one upon another, each
layer composed of a set of polyhedrons such as Si tetrahedrons or Al octahedrons arranged
on the same plane, as exemplified by layered clay minerals and hydrotalcite.
[0125] Clay minerals refer to aluminum silicate minerals which form the most part of clay
(fine soil-like inorganic granular substance having plasticity in a wet state). They
are generally composed of minimum structural units which are Si tetrahedrons having
Si surrounded by 4 O's (oxygen atoms) and Al or Mg octahedrons having Al or Mg surrounded
by 6 OH groups or O's.
[0126] The structure of the layered clay mineral is one in which a hexagonal net sheet is
formed with Si tetrahedrons sharing one plane and O's at the remaining vertices oriented
in the same direction (tetrahedral sheet), or a sheet is formed with Al (or Mg) octahedrons
sharing ridgeangles (octahedral sheet), and these sheets are laminated one upon another.
Minerals having such a structure that a plurality of 1:1 layers, each layer consisting
of one tetrahedral sheet layer and one octahedral sheet layer, are laminated one upon
another are called 1:1 type minerals, minerals having such a structure that a plurality
of 2:1 layers, each layer consisting of one octahedral sheet layer and two tetrahedral
sheet layers sandwiching the octahedral sheet layer, are laminated one upon another
are called 2:1 type minerals, and minerals having such a structure that another octahedral
sheet layer inserted between the layers of 2:1 type are called 2:1:1 type minerals.
Minerals which comprises Mg(OH)
2 octahedral sheets and have metal ions at all octahedral positions are called trioctahedral
type minerals and minerals which comprise Al(OH)
3 octahedral sheets and 1/3 of the octahedral positions are empty holes are called
dioctahedral type minerals. The layered inorganic compound used in the present invention
is preferably a 2:1 type mineral.
[0127] The layered inorganic compound used in the present invention preferably contains
at least one element selected from lithium, sodium, potassium, magnesium, aluminum,
silicon, oxygen, hydrogen, fluorine and carbon. The layered inorganic compound may
be a compound represented by any one of the following formulas. The compound represented
by any one of the following formulas may contain crystal water. These formulas are
the formulas of mineralogically and chemically pure compounds. Since the actual layered
inorganic compound may contain impurities such as sodium silicate, the chemical formula
of the layered inorganic compound determined by elemental analysis does not always
agree with one of these formulas as described in the document (D. W. Thompson, J.
T. Butterworth, J. Colloid Interf. Sci., 151, 236-243 (1992)).
M
xSi
4(Al
2-xMg
x)O
12X
2 (1)
wherein, M is any one of H, Li, Na and K, X is any one of OH and F, and x is a positive
number of less than 2.
M
x(Si
4-xAl
x)Al
2O
10X
2 (2)
wherein, M is any one of H, Li, Na and K, and X is any one of OH and F, and x is a
positive number of less than 4.
M
xSi
4(Mg
3-xLi
x)O
10X
2 (3)
wherein, M is any one of H, Li, Na and K, X is any one of OH and F, and x is a positive
number of less than 3.
M
x(Si
4-xAl
x)Mg
3O
10X
2 (4)
wherein, M is any one of H, Li, Na and K, X is any one of OH and F, and x is a positive
number of less than 4.
MSi
4Mg
2.5O
10X
2 (5)
wherein, M is any one of Li and Na, preferably Na, and X is any one of OH and F, preferably
F.
M
2Si
4Mg
2O
10X
2 (6)
wherein, M is any one of Li and Na, preferably Li, and X is any one of OH and F, preferably
F.
Mg
6Al
2(OH)
16X
2 (7)
wherein, X is any one of halogen, NO
3, SO
4, CO
3 and OH or an anion of an organic acid, preferably CO
3, and x is 2 when X is halogen, OH, NO
3 or a monovalent organic acid and 1 when X is SO
4, CO
3 or a divalent organic acid.
Na
0.33Si
4(Mg
2.67Li
0.33)O
10X
2 (8)
wherein, X is either OH or F, preferably OH.
Na
a-b(Si
4-aAl
a) (Mg
3-bAl
b)O
10X
2 (9)
wherein, X is either OH or F, preferably OH, a is a positive number of less than 4,
and b is a positive number of less than 3, provided that a-b > 0.
[0128] Examples of the layered inorganic compound used in the present invention include
1:1 type clay minerals such as kaolinite, halloysite and serpentine; 2:1 type clay
minerals such as talc, pyrophyllite, smectite, vermiculite (represented by the formula
2 out of the above formulas) and mica including fluorotetrasilicic mica (formula 5)
and taeniolite (formula 6); 2:1:1 type clay minerals such as chlorite; 2:1 to 2:1:1
type intermediate minerals; para-amorphous clay minerals such as imogolite; amorphous
clay minerals such as allophane; hydrotalcite (formula 7); and the like.
[0129] According to ion species contained in the isomorphously substituted tetrahedron and
octahedron, the smectite is divided into a dioctahedral type such as montmorillonite
(formula 1), bentonite which is a natural product containing 40 to 80% of montmorillonite,
and beidellite (formula 2); a trioctahedral type such as hectorite (formula 3, preferably
formula 8), saponite (formula 4, preferably formula 9), and nontronite; and the like.
[0130] The hydrotalcite is a layered mineral represented by the above formula 7, specifically
Mg
6Al
2(OH)
16CO
3·4H
2O in which part of Mg
2+ of Mg(OH)
2 (brucite having a laminate structure consisting of oxygen octahedral layers having
Mg
2+ at the center) is substituted by Al
3+ isomorphously. The hydrotalcite has a positive charge, maintains electrical neutrality
by CO
32- between layers and has anion exchangeability. It is not a silicate mineral but is
often treated as a clay mineral.
[0131] The compositions of some of the above-described layered inorganic compounds used
in the present invention are shown in Table 1 below.
Table 1
| Name of mineral |
Composition* |
| Kaolinite |
Si2Al2O5 (OH) 4 |
| Halloysite |
Si2Al2O5 (OH) 4·2H2O |
| Serpentine |
Si2 (Mg2+,Fe2+) 3O5(OH) 4 |
| Talc |
Si4Mg3 (OH) 2O10 |
| Pyrophyllite |
Si4Al2 (OH) 2O10 |
| Montmorillonite |
MIxSi4 (Al2-xMgx) O10(OH) 2·nH2O |
| Beidellite |
MIx (Si4-xAlx) Al2O10(OH) 2·nH2O |
| Hectorite |
MIxSi4(Mg3-xLix) O10(OH,F) 2·nH2O |
| Saponite |
MIx (Si4-xAlx) Mg3O10(OH) 2·nH2O |
| Nontronite |
MIx (Si4-xAlx) Fe2O10(OH) 2·nH2O |
| Vermiculite |
MIx (Si4-xAlx) Al2O10(OH) 2·nH2O |
| Hydrotalcite |
Mg6Al2 (OH) 16CO3·4H2O |
| *: MI is an exchangeable cation represented by a monovalent cation. |
[0132] The average particle diameter of the layered inorganic compound used in the present
invention is not particularly limited if it is small enough to enable the uniform
dispersion of the compound. Since the layered inorganic compound is generally a planer
particle and has dynamic equilibrium that the aggregation and cleavage of several
particles are repeated, it is difficult to define the average particle diameter thereof.
It is not easy to specify a preferable average particle diameter range. Daring to
say, the value measured by means such as light scattering method or observation through
an electron microscope is preferably 1 nm or more and 20 µm or less, more preferably
10 nm or more and 2 µm or less when the layered inorganic compound is dispersed in
water. Since the layered inorganic compound has ion exchangeability, it is considered
that the layered inorganic compound adsorbs according to the charge and polarity of
a dyestuff or the like. The ion exchangeability of the layered inorganic compound
is derived from layer charge produced by the substitution of metal ions constituting
a layer. Then, the absolute value of layer charge is preferably about 0.2 to 1 for
groups of atoms of the compositions of the formulas shown in Table 1.
[0133] A layered inorganic compound containing transition metal ions such as iron ions as
substituent ions in the structure or impurities is colored by the metal ions and further
shows oxidizing/reducing properties and produces a side reaction with the result that
it has poor transparency. Therefore, the layered inorganic compound is preferably
not substituted by transition metal ions, but the present invention is not limited
by this.
[0134] In the above layered inorganic compounds such as clay minerals, the distance, charge
and polarity between layers can be adjusted in advance by establishing a pillar such
as a quaternary ammonium salt.
[0135] Out of the above layered inorganic compounds used in the present invention, more
preferred are 2:1 type clay minerals and particularly preferred are swelling clay
minerals having ion exchangeability.
[0136] Out of the swelling clay minerals, more preferred are bentonite, smectite, vermiculite
and synthetic fluorine mica, and particularly preferred are synthetic smectite such
as synthetic hectorite and synthetic saponite, and synthetic mica (natural mica is
generally a non-swelling clay mineral) such as swelling synthetic mica (Na type mica)
typified by synthetic fluoro-mica. The swelling function of the swelling clay minerals
is derived from an exchangeable cation or anion. A swelling layered inorganic compound
is preferably used because the detectable substance is quickly adsorbed by the surface
of the interlayers and the surface of a clay association called card house. Clay minerals
may adsorb anionic substances, cationic substances and nonionic polar organic compounds,
and hydrotalcite may adsorb anionic compounds. Compounds which can be adsorbed by
the layered inorganic compounds are detailed in Chapter 11 "Interaction of Clays and
Organic Compounds" of "An Introduction to Clay Colloid Chemistry, Second Edition"
written by H. Van Olphen (Krieger Publishment, Malabar). They may be used alone or
in combination of two or more in the present invention.
[0137] The above layered inorganic compound used in the present invention may be either
synthetic or natural but is preferably synthetic. Unlike natural layered inorganic
compounds, synthetic layered inorganic compounds is chemically uniform and make it
possible to quantitatively handle the detectable substance which has been adsorbed
and quantitatively and optically handle the detectable substance because they do not
contain colored metals such as iron between layers and accordingly, have high transparency.
"Synthetic" as used herein means that layered inorganic compounds are produced mainly
by a hydrothermal synthetic method or melting method at least in the case of smectite.
Swelling clay minerals obtained by purifying natural products are also preferably
used.
[0138] These layered inorganic compounds are commercially available. Examples thereof include
Lucentite SWN and Lucentite SWF (synthetic hectorite) and ME (fluoro-mica) of Co-op
Chemical Co., Smecton SA (synthetic saponite) of Kunimine Kogyo Co., Thixopy W (synthetic
hectorite) and Kyoword 500 (synthetic hydrotalcite) of Kyowa Chemical Industry Co.,
Raponite (synthetic hectorite) of Laporte Co., natural bentonite marketed by Nacalai
Tesque Co., Multigel (bentonite) of Toyojun Kogyo Co., and the like (Names with captial
initials are trade names.).
[0139] It is known that the above layered inorganic compounds adsorb organic compounds such
as amines, polyenes and various dyestuffs. They have been used as a water treatment
agent which adsorbs oil, dyestuffs and the like, a protein removing agent used in
the production of wine, sweet sake and the like, as a decoloring and purifying agent
which adsorbs and removes impurities, and the like. These layered inorganic compounds
are known as a substance providing a specific reaction site by causing a phenomenon
called "metachromasy" and further known as a substance improving the optical stability
of a natural dyestuff in recent years.
[0140] However, in the first method of the present invention, it has been found that measurement
sensitivity can be increased by allowing the detectable substance to be adsorbed by
the layered inorganic compound. Therefore, by the addition of the layered inorganic
compound, the measurement of hydrogen peroxide in the above reaction system using
4-AA and a hydrogen donor, for example, can be carried out more quantitatively. A
case in which the sensitivity of measurement is increased by using a layered inorganic
compound such as a clay mineral in the measurement of a substance has not been reported
yet.
[0141] In the second method of the present invention, an attempt has been made to add these
layered inorganic compounds to a reaction system based on the assumption that there
are such effects that a complex is formed by the adsorption of the detectable substance
to the layered inorganic compound, the detectable substance is protected from the
reaction system, and the electron level which involves in a decomposition reaction
is changed by adsorption. As a result, it has been found that the detectable substance
is adsorbed by the layered inorganic compounds and the adsorbed detectable substance
can exist fully stably in the presence of excessive hydrogen peroxide or ascorbic
acid. By the addition of the layered inorganic compound, the measurement of hydrogen
peroxide in the above reaction system using 4-AA and a hydrogen donor, for example,
can be carried out with higher accuracy. A case in which a layered inorganic compound
such as a clay mineral is added to a reaction system for measuring an analyte, to
stabilize the formed detectable substance and improve the sensitivity and accuracy
of the measurement of the analyte has never been reported yet.
[0142] In the third method of the present invention, it has been found that the formation
reaction of the detectable substance is allowed to proceed in the presence of the
layered inorganic compound for the purpose of analysis, and though its mechanism is
not fully known, the reaction precursor of the detectable substance is adsorbed by
the layered inorganic compound and concentrated on the surface of the layered inorganic
compound to improve the rate of the formation reaction of the detectable substance,
thereby making it possible to quicken measurement.
[0143] In the fourth method of the present invention, it has been found that even if an
insoluble substance is formed, high-sensitivity quick detection can be made by dispersing
the layered inorganic compound in the solvent of the reaction system including the
formation reaction of the detectable substance. A case in which the layered inorganic
compound such as a clay mineral is dispersed in a solvent to measure a substance has
never been reported yet.
[0144] More surprisingly, measurement accuracy is not impaired by the addition of a layered
inorganic compound as a detection reaction is not interrupted even when the layered
inorganic compound is caused to exist in a reaction system.
[0145] A method for causing the layered inorganic compound to exist in the reaction system
in the method of the present invention, depends on the reaction system used, and preferably,
the layered inorganic compound is dispersed in the reaction medium of the reaction
system in the form of any one selected from dispersion, sol, gel, slurry, agglomerate,
aggregate and sintered porous body. The reaction medium of the reaction system may
be the reaction solvent of the formation reaction of the detectable substance. In
the fourth method of the present invention, it is the reaction solvent of the formation
reaction of a substance insoluble in the reaction solvent.
[0146] To cause the layered inorganic compound to exist in the reaction system, more preferably,
the layered inorganic compound is dispersed in a solvent and the resulting dispersion
is added to the reaction system. The solvent is not particularly limited and any conventionally
known solvents may be used. Examples of the solvent include water such as distilled
water, alcohols such as ethanol, ketones such as acetone, ethers such as diethyl ether,
esters such as ethyl acetate, halogenated hydrocarbons such as chloroform, aromatic
hydrocarbons such as benzene and toluene, and the like, from which one suitable for
an analyte and a detection reaction system thereof can be selected. Preferably, the
layered inorganic compound is dispersed in a buffer which will be described hereinafter
and the resulting buffer dispersion is added to the reaction system. It is known in
dry chemistry that a sample solution such as blood, saliva and urine containing an
analyte can be used as a reaction solvent.
[0147] The amount of the layered inorganic compound added is determined according to a reaction
system used. Depending on the layered inorganic compound used, it is preferably such
as to eliminate a case where the number of adsorption sites is too small for a detectable
substance and the detectable substance cannot be adsorbed completely and remains in
the solution, or a case where the number of adsorption sites is too large and there
are differences in the concentration of the detectable substance adsorbed at these
sites.
[0148] The preferable amount of the layered inorganic compound added to the reaction system
is determined as follows. That is, since the layered inorganic compound adsorbs a
dyestuff or the like in an amount corresponding mainly to the degree of the above
layer charge, the total number of adsorption sites of the dyestuff or the like can
be obtained for each type of layered inorganic compound. When the concentration of
a reagent in a detection reaction system is determined, the approximate maximum amount
of a formed dyestuff or the like can be calculated, and each type of layered inorganic
compound can be added so that the maximum amount of the dyestuff or the like which
can be formed does not exceed the whole adsorption sites of the layered inorganic
compound.
[0149] The time for adding the layered inorganic compound is not particularly limited and
may be before or after the formation reaction of the detectable substance. Preferably,
the layered inorganic compound is added to a reaction system before the formation
reaction of the detectable substance and dispersed in the reaction system.
[0150] The reason why the layered inorganic compound is dispersed in the reaction system
is that interaction such as adsorption between the reaction starting substance, the
reaction intermediate or the reaction product involved in the formation reaction of
the detectable substance and the layered inorganic compound can readily occur. Another
reason is that a state where the layered inorganic compound is uniformly dispersed
without differences in concentration is suitable for detection. Therefore, the term
"dispersion" as used herein means a state where the layered inorganic compound is
dispersed in a solution or a state of a sol or gel, or a state suitable for detection
where the above interaction readily occurs.
[0151] In the fourth method of the present invention, an insoluble substance can be adsorbed
by the layered inorganic compound by uniformly dispersing the layered inorganic compound
in the reaction solvent to make it existent in the reaction system.
[0152] The dispersion medium in which the layered inorganic compound is dispersed is not
always the same as a reaction solvent in which a reaction takes place. The layered
inorganic compound may be dispersed in a dispersion comprising a reaction solvent
as a dispersion medium, or a sol, a gel, an agglomerate, an aggregate or a sintered
porous body which the reaction solvent can permeate. The dispersion medium is not
particularly limited if the layered inorganic compound can be uniformly dispersed
therein.
[0153] The layered inorganic compound in the form of sol, gel, agglomerate, aggregate or
sintered porous body which the reaction solvent can permeate can be used as a detection
portion which also serves as a reaction portion in a testing piece in dry chemistry
or the like. If the layered inorganic compound can be uniformly dispersed, the measuring
method of the present invention can be applied to the testing piece.
[0154] When the layered inorganic compound having an exchangeable cation or exchangeable
anion is dispersed in water by agitation or ultrasonication, an uniform dispersion
can be obtained if it has an appropriate concentration. However, by the addition of
an electrolyte or an organic compound or by long-time standing or temperature variations,
the particles of the layered inorganic compound may agglomerate, aggregate or form
a gel or precipitate. The agglomeration is generally caused by the gentle interaction
of the particles and the particles can be re-dispersed by agitation easily.
[0155] The dispersion, agglomeration and re-dispersion of the layered inorganic compound
are detailed, for example, in Chapter III "The Theory of Stability of Hydrophobic
Sols", Chapter IV "Successes of the Theory of Stability - Further Theories and Refinement",
Chapter VII "Electric Double-Layer Structure and Stability of Clay Suspensions" and
Chapter VIII "Peptization of Clay Suspensions" of "An Introduction to Clay Colloid
Chemistry, Second Edition" written by H. Van Olphen (Krieger Publishment, Malabar).
[0156] The degree of adsorption is influenced by the composition of a buffer (pH, ionic
strength, components forming a complex, and the like). For example, smectite dispersed
in purified water hardly adsorbs brilliant blue FCF whereas smectite dispersed in
a bis-tris buffer solution having a pH of 6.5 [prepared from bis(2-hydroxyethyl)iminotris(hydroxymethyl)methane
and hydrochloric acid] quickly adsorbs this dyestuff.
[0157] Examples of the buffer or buffer solution used in the method of the present invention
include a phosphoric acid buffer solution, citric acid buffer solution, N-(2-acetoamide)imino
diacetic acid buffer solution and the like, besides the above bis-tris buffer solution.
The present invention is not limited to these and a suitable one is suitably selected
according to the reaction system used. The pH, concentration and the like of the buffer
are preferably suitably selected according to the reaction system used.
[0158] The time for adding the buffer is not particularly limited and may be before or after
the addition of the layered inorganic compound. It is preferably added as a buffer
solution containing the layered inorganic compound dispersed therein to a reaction
system together with the layered inorganic compound.
4. Surfactant
[0159] In measurement with the method of the present invention, various surfactants can
be added to the reaction system. Addition of a surfactant makes it possible to uniformly
disperse a sample containing a hardly soluble substance and uniformly and quickly
infiltrate the sample into the test portion of a testing piece by improving the wettability
by the sample. Since the surfactant has a function to disperse or dissolve a substance
adsorbed to the interface, it conflicts with the adsorption of the formed detectable
substance to the layered inorganic compound or dissolve the formed detectable substance.
Therefore, it may weaken the effect of the present invention. As the surfactant used
in combination with the layered inorganic compound in the present invention, a surfactant
which does not interfere the adsorption of the formed detectable substance to the
layered inorganic compound is preferably selected. The amount of the surfactant used
is preferably small enough to prevent the interference of the adsorption. To adjust
the adsorption strength between the detectable substance such as a dyestuff and the
layered inorganic compound, a known surfactant suitable for the reaction system may
be used and the amount of the surfactant added may be controlled.
[0160] The type of surfactant which does not interfere the adsorption may be one of which
molecular weight is not much larger than that of the formed dyestuff and the organicity
and the inorganicity of which satisfy the following equation:

[0161] The above equation is obtained by studying the adsorption interference effect and
the relationship between the inorganicity and the organicity of each of various surfactants
having known structures. That is, the number of points is allotted to each functional
group or atom, for example, 20 is allotted to a single carbon atom as an organicity,
100 to a hydroxyl group as an inorganicity, 30 to polyethylene oxide as an organicity
and 60 to the polyethylene oxide as an inorganicity, 70 to a nitro group as an organicity
and 70 to the nitro group as an inorganicity. Then, the total of inorganicity values
and the total of organicity values are obtained by summing the numbers of points for
functional groups and atoms constituting a compound. There is known an organic conceptional
diagram in which a total inorganicity and a total organicity are plotted on rectangular
coordinates, compounds having similar properties are located in the same area of the
rectangular coordinates, and common properties appears without depending on the structure
of a compound (Yoshio Kohda, "Organic Conceptional Diagram - Basis and Application-",
p. 11, Sankyo Shuppan (1984)). The inventors of the present invention have studied
the adsorption interference effects and the relationship between the inorganic values
and organic values of many surfactants having known structures and have found that
surfactants which do not interfere the adsorption satisfy the above equation in the
organic conceptional diagram. Although calculation data on the above organic conceptional
diagram in the above book can be used for the calculation of the inorganicity and
the organicity, the above equation was obtained from calculation data provided in
"Personal Computer Organic Conceptional Diagram" program manufactured by Dr. Yoshio
Honma (The Chemical Software Society of Japan and the like).
[0162] The type and amount of a surfactant which does not interfere adsorption can be selected
as follows.
(1) Hydrogen peroxide is added to a reaction solution containing a predetermined amount
of smectite, 4-AA and N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline to
develop color.
(2) A surfactant is added to a reaction solution having he same composition as in
(1) above to the same concentration and hydrogen peroxide is added to develop color.
(3) Smectite is separated by appropriate means such as settling, centrifugal sedimentation
or filtration, the color tone of the supernatant or filtrate is measured by a spectrophotometer,
and the amounts of the formed dyestuff absorbed by the smectite are compared between
(1) and (2). Alternatively, when flocculation caused by adsorption is observed, the
amount of adsorption is evaluated with the degree of flocculation or settling.
(4) The type and amount of a surfactant which does not produce any difference between
when it is added and when it is not added are selected.
[0163] Preferred examples of the surfactant which is selected by the above methods include
sugar-alkyl ethers such as n-octyl-β-D-glucopyranoside; sugar-alkyl thioethers such
as n-octyl-β-D-thioglucopyranoside and n-heptyl-β-D-thioglucopyranoside; super amides
such as n-octanoyl-N-methylglucamide and n-nonanoyl-N-methylglucamide, sugar esters
such as β-D-fructopyranosyl-α-D-glucopyranoside monodecanoate; N,N-bis(3-D-gluconamidepropyl)deoxycolamide
and the like.
[0164] The amount of the surfactant added is not particularly limited and the proportion
of the surfactant to the total amount of the layered inorganic compounds is not particularly
limited as well. An amount suitable for the types of the surfactant and the layered
inorganic compound and the reaction system may be selected. The surfactant is used
in an amount that its effect can be exhibited sufficiently, for example, an amount
which does not greatly exceed the critical micell concentration of the surfactant
used in an aqueous solution. For example, a 0.3% aqueous solution of n-octyl-β-D-thioglucopyranoside,
a 0.3% aqueous solution of β-D-fructopyranosyl-α-D-glucopyranoside monodecanoate and
a 0.3% aqueous solution of N,N-bis(3-D-gluconamidepropyl)deoxycolamide are preferably
used.
[0165] The surfactant is preferably used particularly when measurement is carried out by
the first to third methods of the present invention.
5. Embodiments of measuring method
[0166] In a preferred embodiment of the measuring method of the present invention, the layered
inorganic compound is added to the reaction system and dispersed in the reaction system
in advance. In the dispersion, a translucent colloidal agglomerate may be produced
but the agglomerate does not always need to be produced in the present invention.
This agglomerate can be considered as a complex comprising the layered inorganic compound
and the detectable substance adsorbed thereby. This agglomerate may be uniformly re-dispersed
by stirring. When this agglomerate is inconvenient, the dispersibility of the layered
inorganic compound is improved by using a phosphate buffer solution, thereby making
it possible to suppress the production of an agglomerate.
[0167] It is also possible to further improve measurement sensitivity by allowing the detectable
substance used finally for detection to be adsorbed by the layered inorganic compound,
thereby settling it, and separating the detectable substance from the reaction system
and concentrating it. The method for separating the layered inorganic compound by
which the detectable substance has been adsorbed is not particularly limited and selected
from, for example, settling, centrifugation, filtration, chromatography, electrophoresis,
solvent evaporation and the like. Specifically, the filtration of a dispersion of
the layered inorganic compound exemplified in the present invention can be carried
out, for example, by using a polysulfone ultrafiltration membrane having an exclusion
limit of about 10,000 or a pore size of about 5 nm.
[0168] In the present invention, the detectable substance adsorbed by the layered inorganic
compound is measured. The measuring method may be selected from an absorption measuring
method, fluorescence measuring method, luminescence measuring method, electrochemical
measuring method, light scattering measuring method, reflectance measuring method
or the like. Preferably, it is an optical measuring method such as colorimetry typified
by absorptiometry using an absorptiometer or the like. Since the layered inorganic
compound used in the present invention rarely absorbs light of a visible to near infrared
range, even in the form of colloidal dispersion or gel, optical measurement can be
carried out. When the dispersion is measured directly, such means as an opal glass
method can be selected as the system. Since a porous structure which a reaction solvent
can permeate can be fabricated using the layered inorganic compound as described later,
a testing piece having this portion as a detection portion which also serves as a
reaction portion is used to carry out reflectance measurement, absorption measurement,
fluorescence measurement and the like. An electrochemical measuring method for measuring
an oxidation/reduction current or a membrane potential with an electrode can also
be used. The electrode is contacted to the layered inorganic compound by which the
detectable substance has been adsorbed to measure electrochemical response with high
sensitivity.
II. Testing piece of the Invention
[0169] The testing piece of the present invention is an analytical testing piece for measuring
an analyte by measuring a detectable substance which is formed when the analyte contained
in a sample reacts with a reagent. The testing piece comprises at least one test portion
having a detection portion for detecting the detectable substance.
[0170] The test portion is a functional portion responsible for a series of analytical processes
of the absorption, diffusion, reaction, detection and the like of the sample in the
testing piece. The test portion, whose structure is not particularly limited, generally
comprises the detection potion for detecting the detectable substance such as a dyestuff
with reflectance, transmission/absorption, fluorescence or the like; a sample suction
portion, provided at the end or near the end of the test portion, for sucking and
introducing the sample into the test portion; a diffusion/infiltration portion for
uniformly infiltrating and diffusing the sample into the test portion; a reagent portion
containing a reagent which reacts with the analyte contained in the sample; a reaction
portion where a reaction such as a detection reaction takes place; a developing portion
for separating a component contained in the sample or a dyestuff formed by the detection
reaction by a function similar to chromatography; a time control portion for controlling
the proceeding of a reaction by utilizing the time during which the sample moves;
a holding portion for trapping or removing a component contained in the sample or
the formed dyestuff by an adsorption function; an absorption portion, provided at
the end or near the end of the test portion on a side opposite to the sample suction
portion with respect to the detection portion, for absorbing excess of a sample solution,
a washing solution and a developing solution to prevent a back flow; and the like.
[0171] These portions bearing the functions of the test portion may overlap with one another
in function. A single portion may have a plurality of functions, for example, the
detection portion may also serve as the reagent portion and the reaction portion,
and the detection portion may also serve as the holding portion.
[0172] A preferred embodiment of the testing piece of the present invention is a testing
piece comprising at least one multi-layered test portion composed of two or more layers
including a detection layer for detecting the detectable substance as the detection
portion. Layers other than the detection layer include a sample suction layer for
sucking a sample and introducing it into the test portion; a diffusion layer for uniformly
infiltrating and diffusing the sample into the test portion; a reagent layer containing
a reagent which reacts with the analyte contained in the sample; a reaction layer
where a reaction such as a detection reaction takes place; a developing layer or holding
layer, formed between the reaction layer and the detection layer, having a function
to remove an interfering component; an absorption layer for absorbing excess of the
sample, a washing solution or a developing solution added to prevent a back flow;
an adhesive layer for fixing the test portion on the support; and the like. Particularly
preferably, it is a testing piece comprising a diffusion layer for diffusing the sample
in addition to the detection layer so that the sample passes through the diffusion
layer to be diffused and reaches the detection layer. The testing piece of the present
invention may be a testing piece having a single test portion or a multi-item testing
piece having two or more test portions. In the case of the multi-item testing piece,
a plurality of samples can be analyzed at the same time, and two or more analytes
contained in the sample can be analyzed at the same time by using different reagents
for different items.
[0173] Another preferred embodiment of the testing piece of the present invention is a testing
piece comprising at least one test portion having a detection area for detecting the
detectable substance as the detection portion. On the testing piece can be formed
areas other than the detection area, such as a sample suction area for sucking and
introducing a sample into the test portion; a diffusion area for uniformly infiltrating
and diffusing the sample into the test portion; a reagent area containing a reagent
which reacts with an analyte contained in the sample; a reaction area where a reaction
such as a detection reaction takes place; a developing area for separating a component
contained in the sample or a dyestuff formed by a detection reaction by a function
similar to chromatography such as adsorption or distribution; a time control area
for controlling the proceeding of a reaction using the time during which the sample
moves; a holding area for trapping or removing a component contained in the sample
or the formed dyestuff by an adsorption function; an absorption area for absorbing
excess of a sample solution, a washing solution or a developing solution to prevent
a back flow; and the like. Particularly preferably, it is a testing piece which comprises
a diffusion area for diffusing the sample in addition to the detection area so that
the sample dropped onto the end or the like of the testing piece can pass through
the diffusion area, move over the plane of the testing piece mainly by a capillary
infiltration action and reach the detection area. In this case, the detection area
may have the above multi-layer structure composed of two or more layers including
the detection layer for detecting the detectable substance. The testing piece of the
present invention may be a testing piece comprising only one test portion composed
of one set of the detection area and the reagent area, or a multi-item testing piece
comprising two or more test portions thereon. In the case of the multi-item testing
piece, a plurality of samples can be analyzed at the same time, and two or more analytes
contained in the sample can be analyzed at the same time by using different reagents
for different items.
[0174] In the present invention, the reaction portion where the analyte contained in the
sample reacts with the reagent may be provided separately from the detection portion
so that the detectable substance is formed in the reaction portion and then introduced
and detected in the detection portion. In this case, the detection portion is preferably
provided at a position which the sample reaches after it is diffused and passes through
the reaction portion. Specifically, the detection layer is preferably formed at a
position which the sample reaches after it permeates from the surface of the multi-layered
test portion, passes through the diffusion layer to be diffused, moves to the reaction
layer as an intermediate layer and passes through the reaction layer. The detection
area, the reaction area and the diffusion area are formed on the testing piece, and
the detection area is preferably formed in an area which the sample reaches after
it moves over the plane, permeates through the diffusion area, moves to the reaction
area and passes through the reaction area.
[0175] In the present invention, the detection portion may also serve as the reaction portion
where the analyte contained in the sample reacts with the reagent so that the detectable
substance can be formed by a reaction between the analyte contained in the sample
and the reagent in the detection portion.
[0176] The detection portion in the present invention is a portion where the detectable
substance such as a dyestuff formed by a reaction between the analyte contained in
the sample and the reagent is actually detected. However, the detection portion may
also serve as the reaction portion where the above reaction takes place or the reagent
portion containing the reagent as described above. In this case, the reagent is generally
contained in the detection portion in advance. Meanwhile, in the present invention,
the testing piece may have a detection portion independent from the reaction portion
and the reagent portion. In this case, the reagent may not be contained in the test
portion and may be added before and/or after the addition of the sample. Or, a solution
of the detectable substance such as a dyestuff formed by a reaction between the analyte
and the reagent may be added.
[0177] The testing piece of the present invention generally comprises the test portion and
a support portion shaped like a sheet, a tube or a rod for supporting the test portion,
and optinally a sensor such as an electrode, a sample solution suction device and
the like.
[0178] The present invention is preferably applied to a testing piece which uses a reagent
which can form the detectable substance such as a dyestuff and the reaction system
as described hereinafter.
[0179] The reagent is not particularly limited if it can form a complex by interaction such
as adsorption between the detectable substance such as a dyestuff formed by a reaction
and the layered inorganic compound used in the present invention as described in the
section of the measuring method of the present invention.
[0180] The reagent for forming the detectable substance to be adsorbed by the layered inorganic
compound or the like can be widely found in compounds such as a dyestuff precursor
for forming an optically detectable substance such as a dyestuff or a fluorescent
dyestuff through an oxidation-reduction reaction, an acid-base reaction, a condensation
reaction, a complex formation reaction and the like, compounds for forming the electrochemically
detectable oxidized/reduced form of an electron carrier or a complex compound, and
the like.
[0181] Since the sample, the reagent or the reaction product is often in the form of a solution
comprising water as a solvent, if the detectable substance is water-soluble, it is
readily diffused and eluted. Therefore, when the detectable substance is water-soluble,
the effect of the present invention is particularly marked. Therefore, the used reagent
is preferably a reagent for forming a water-soluble detectable compound. In fact,
a large number of such reagents are used. However, the reagent is not limited to these.
The sample, the reagent or the reaction product may be dissolved in a solvent other
than water. In this case, the used reagent may be a reagent for forming a detectable
substance which is diffused and eluted by that solvent. A reagent for forming a detectable
substance insoluble in the solvent of the sample, the reagent or the reaction product
may be used.
[0182] Any reagents are acceptable if they form detectable substances as listed in the description
of the measuring method of the present invention. Preferred examples of the reagent
include compounds having a conjugate system such as an aromatic ring, specifically
reagents (which form quinone dyestuffs when oxidation-condensed) for a coupler typified
by 4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one and a hydrogen donor
(N-ethyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline and the like) as dyestuff precursors;
dyestuff precursors for forming color-producing dyestuffs by oxidation such as o-tolidine
and benzidines (3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine and the like); leuco substances (developing
color when oxidized) of dyestuffs such as 2,6-dichloro-4-[(4-hydroxyphenyl)imino]-2,5-cyclohexadien-1-one;
compounds for forming fluorescent substances when oxidized, such as 4-hydroxyphenylacetic
acid; luminescent substances such as chemiluminescent substances; reagents for forming
dyestuffs when reduced, such as tetrazolium salt (forming formazan when reduced) and
1,1'-dimethyl-4,4'-bipyridinium salt; compounds which develop color or change their
colors by pH variations, such as Bromocresol Green; known reagents for coloration
reactions such as diazonium salts (forming azo dyestuffs by coupling) including 2-methoxy-4-morpholinobenzenediazonium
salt and 2,3-dimethyl-2,3-bis(hydroxyamino)butane (developing color when reacting
with aldehyde); known reaction reagents such as o-phthalaldehyde (forming a fluorescent
substance when reacting with histamine); enzyme substrates such as 4-methylumbelliferyl
phosphate; compounds which develop color or change their colors by forming a complex
such as 2-(5-bromo-2-pyridylazo)-5-[N-propyl-N-(3-sulfopropyl)amino]aniline salt;
and compounds capable of forming the above detectable substances.
[0183] Reaction systems for forming the above detectable substances are those used in the
measuring method as described in the section of the measuring method of the present
invention. The reaction systems include the following.
(a) A reaction system including a reaction for forming hydrogen peroxide or an oxidation
reaction using hydrogen peroxide as an oxidizing agent.
(b) A reaction system including a reaction for forming nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide
(NADH) or nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH) or a reaction in which
NADH or NADPH functions as a reducing agent.
(c) A reaction system using a reaction for forming a diazonium salt by allowing nitrous
acid to react with an aromatic primary amine in the presence of an acid.
(d) A reaction system including a reaction in which a fluorescent enzyme substrate
such as 4-methylumbelliferone having a phosphoric acid ester forms a fluorescent substance
by separating a phosphate by the function of alkali phosphatase.
(e) A reaction system including a reaction for forming an oxidized/reduced form of
an electron carrier by oxidizing/reducing the electron carrier such as 1,4-diaminobenzene
with an oxidizing/reducing enzyme.
[0184] Analytical methods using the above reaction systems include immunoassay such as ELISA,
immunochromatography, urine examination, biochemical blood examination, colorimetry
and the like. Testing pieces used in these analytical methods are detailed in such
documents as H.G. Curme, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 24 (8), 1335-1342 (1978); B.
Walter, Analytical Chemistry, 55 (4), 498A (1983); Asaji Kondo, Bunseki, 1984 (7),
534; Asaji Kondo, Bunseki, 1986 (6), 387; Bunseki Kagaku Binran, p.8 (edited by the
Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry: fourth revised edition, Maruzen (1991)); Japanese
Patent Application Laid-open No. 6-213886(1994) (Masao Kitajima, et al.); M. P. Allen,
et al., Clinical Chemistry, 36 (9), 1591-1597 (1990); D. Noble, Analytical Chemistry,
65 (23), 1037A (1993); R. F. Zuk, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 31 (7), 1144-1150 (1985)
and the like. Analytes which can be analyzed by these methods include biological components
contained in the body fluid such as urine and blood, trace amounts of substances existent
in foods, medicines or natural environment, industrial chemical substances, trace
amounts of substances contained in waste, and the like. The testing piece of the present
invention can be used in the analysis of these substances.
[0185] A sample to which the testing piece of the present invention can be applied may contain
only one analyte or two or more analytes.
[0186] A known compound which is generally used in an analytical testing piece, such as
a hydrophilic polymer, can be contained in the test portion of the testing piece of
the present invention as required.
[0187] In the present invention, a layered inorganic compound must be contained in the test
portion of the testing piece, preferably the detection portion which is a portion
where a formed dyestuff exists of the test portion.
[0188] That is, the layered inorganic compound must be contained in at least one detection
layer or detection area constituting the test portion. Specifically, in a multi-layered
test portion composed of two or more layers including the detection layer, the layered
inorganic compound is contained at least in the detection layer. In this case, the
layered inorganic compound may be further contained in a layer other than the detection
layer, for example, the sample suction layer, the diffusion layer, the reagent layer,
the reaction layer, the adhesive layer, the holding layer, the developing layer, the
absorption layer or the like.
[0189] When the test portion has the detection area, the layered inorganic compound is contained
at least in the detection area. Further, the layered inorganic compound may be further
contained in an area other than the above detection area, for example, the sample
suction area, the diffusion area, the reagent area, the reaction area, the developing
area, the time control area, the holding area, the absorption area or the like. In
this case, the detection area may have a multi-layer structure. In this case, the
layered inorganic compound is contained at least in the detection layer out of layers
constituting the detection area. The layered inorganic compound may be further contained
in other layer.
[0190] When the test portion has a reaction portion where an analyte contained in a sample
reacts with a reagent besides the detection portion, the detection portion is preferably
provided at a position which the sample reaches after it is diffused and passes through
the reaction portion so that the detectable substance formed in the reaction portion
moves to the detection portion containing the layered inorganic compound to be detected.
[0191] Examples of the layered inorganic compound used in the testing piece of the present
invention include those listed in the above description of the measuring method of
the present invention. Like the measuring method of the present invention, out of
these layered inorganic compounds, preferred are 2:1 type clay minerals and particularly
preferred are swelling clay minerals having ion exchangeability. Out of the swelling
clay minerals, more preferred are bentonite, smectite, vermicullite, and synthetic
mica (natural mica is generally a non-swelling clay mineral) such as swelling synthetic
mica (or Na type mica) typified by synthetic fluoro-mica, and particularly preferred
are synthetic smectite such as synthetic hectorite and synthetic saponite, and synthetic
fluoro-mica. They may be used alone or in combination of two or more. No attempt has
been made so far to contain a layered inorganic compound in a testing piece utilizing
its effect of suppressing the diffusion or elution of a dyestuff or the like.
[0192] Surprisingly, when the layered inorganic compound is added to the test portion such
as the detection portion, a detection reaction is not interfered. Thereby, addition
of this layered inorganic compound makes it possible to carry out examination making
use of, for example, the above reaction system using 4-AA and a hydrogen donor more
accurately and easily without being worried by elution.
[0193] A portion containing the layered inorganic compound of the test portion is preferably
a porous structure, though its substance is not particularly limited, but it is preferably
formed mainly by the layered inorganic compound, or the layered inorganic compound
and at least one porous substance selected from the group consisting of hydrophilic
polymers, membrane filters, fiber assemly such as filter paper, cloth, and glass filters,
and organic and inorganic compound fine powders such as cellulose and diatomaceous
earth.
[0194] The porous structure formed by the layered inorganic compound is a sol, a gel, an
agglomerate or aggregate of the layered inorganic compound, or a porous body obtained
by drying or sintering these. A buffer to be described later may be added to the porous
structure. For example, a drop of a 1% dispersion of the layered inorganic compound
is let fall upon a support, cast and lyophilized to obtain an absorptive porous layer.
[0195] The support may be shaped like a sheet, a tube or a rod. The material of the support
is not particularly limited and may be selected from fiber assembly such as filer
paper, nonwoven cloths, cloths and glass filters; granular substances such as glass
beads, polymer beads and titanium dioxide; granular substances and fine powders such
as cellulose, diatomaceous earth, soluble salt and hydrophobic polysaccharide powders;
membrane filters; organic polymers such as plates of plastic including polyethylene
terephthalate (PET) and polystyrene; and the like. More preferably, the substance
is a gel of a hydrophilic polymer, or a membrane filter or a plastic plate whose surface
is made hydrophilic.
[0196] The hydrophilic polymer may be a polymer, a copolymer, an associated substance or
the like containing a chemical structure such as an polyalkylene oxide exemplified
by polethylene oxide and polypropylene oxide; cellulose derivative exemplified by
carboxymethyl cellulose and hydroxyethyl cellulose; gelatin or derivative thereof
(such as phthalated gelatin); other polysaccharide or derivative thereof (agarose,
carrageenan, chitin, chitosan or the like); polyvinyl alcohol; polyvinyl pyrrolidone;
polyacrylate (sodium polyacrylate, copolymer thereof with maleic acid or the like);
polyacrylamide; polymethacrylic acid (polyhydroxyethyl methacrylate or the like);
methacrylamide; polysulfone; polyimide; polystyrene; polycarbonate; polyether ether
ketone; polyoxymethylene; sodium alginate; or polyolefin resin exemplified by polyethylene,
polypropylene or polyfluoroethylene which is made hydrophilic (by exposure to ultraviolet
light, silanol treatment or the like).
[0197] Preferably, the above hydrophilic polymer has a network structure produced by graft
polymerization using a crosslinking agent or association due to hydrophobic affinity
and is insoluble in water.
[0198] Examples of the hydrophilic polymer include polylysine crosslinked by glutaraldehyde,
polyethylene oxide crosslinked product, polyacrylamide graft polymer, polyacrylate
graft polymers, starch-acrylate graft polymers and the like.
[0199] At least one porous substance selected from the group consisting of hydrophilic polymers,
membrane filters, fiber assembly and organic and inorganic compound fine powders and
the layered inorganic compound may be both contained in the test portion to form the
porous structure. To form this porous structure, a method in which a mixture solution
of a porous structure forming substance and the layered inorganic compound is prepared
and cast on or impregnated into the above-described support, a method in which a porous
structure forming substance is used to form a porous support such as a porous film
and a dispersion or a mixture solution of the layered inorganic compound is cast or
impregnated into the porous support, or the like may be used.
[0200] To mix the layered inorganic compound at the time of production of the porous structure,
for example, a method in which the layered inorganic compound is kneaded with a hydrophilic
polymer.or fine powders and formed into a film is used. Alternatively, a buffer solution
having the layered inorganic compound dissolved or dispersed in a buffer to be described
later may be dried and the obtained dried product may be mixed with a raw substance.
[0201] When the dispersion or the mixture solution of the layered inorganic compound is
impregnated into the porous support, the type of solvent used is not particularly
limited and conventionally known solvents can be used. A solvent suitable for the
detection reaction system used can be selected from water such as distilled water,
alcohols such as ethanol, ketones such as acetone, ethers such as diethyl ether, esters
such as ethyl acetate, halogenated hydrocarbons such as chloroform, and aromatic hydrocarbons
such as benzene and toluene. Preferably, the porous support is impregnated with a
buffer solution comprising the layered inorganic compound dissolved or dispersed in
a buffer to be described later. The concentration of the solution or dispersion can
be suitably selected according to a reaction system or the like and is not particularly
limited.
[0202] A method for forming a layer or an area containing the layered inorganic compound
will be described below.
[0203] To form the layer or the area containing the layered inorganic compound, a porous
structure obtained by drying or sintering a sol, a gel, an agglomerate or an aggregate
of the layered inorganic compound can be used. For example, a drop of a 1% dispersion
of the layered inorganic compound is cast on a plastic sheet, and lyophilized to obtain
a porous layer having high absorptivity.
[0204] At least one porous structure forming substance selected from the group consisting
of the above hydrophilic polymers, membrane filters, fiber assembly and organic and
inorganic powders can be used in the formation.
[0205] The hydrophilic polymer is particularly preferably gelatin, polyacrylic acid or derivative
thereof, polyacrylamide, polyvinyl alcohol, polyvinylpyrrolidone, polyethylene glycol,
polysaccharide or derivative thereof, polypeptide, or polyamine or derivative thereof.
The hydrophilic polymer may be used as a gel or a dried product thereof. The hydrophilic
polymer may be a gel whose degree of crosslinking is controlled by the addition of
a known crosslinking agent such as glutaraldehyde. These hydrophilic polymers may
be used alone or in combination.
[0206] To obtain a porous structure comprising the above substance and the layered inorganic
compound, various methods already described in the section of the method for containing
the layered inorganic compound in the test portion can be used. For example, a 1%
dispersion of the layered inorganic compound dispersed in a buffer solution is impregnated
into filter paper and dried with hot air to obtain a porous area. A small piece of
the filter paper is affixed to a plastic sheet to obtain a porous layer.
[0207] The following procedure, for example, can be employed. The same amount of an aqueous
solution of a polyacrylamide having a predetermined concentration is mixed with a
3% dispersion of the layered inorganic compound in a polyacrylamide/layered inorganic
compound weight ratio of 1:1 to 4:1 and stirred well for several hours. pH of the
resulting mixture solution is adjusted to about 5 to 9 by adding a diluted aqueous
solution of sodium carbonate or acetic acid if necessary. If necessary, the mixture
solution is made alkaline, N,N-methylenebisacrylamide is added to a concentration
of 2%, and the mixture solution is exposed to electron beams to cause a crosslinking
reaction. The thus obtained mixture solution is coated on a plastic plate and dried
to obtain a porous film.
[0208] The thus formed porous structure containing the layered inorganic compound is excellent
particularly in absorptivity and preferably used as the test portion of a testing
piece. As a matter of course, the formation example of the test portion is not limited
to this. For example, the formation of the test portions of various known testing
pieces can be applied. These testing pieces are described in such documents as H.
G. Curme, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 24 (8), 1335-1342 (1978); B. Walker, Analytical
Chemistry, 55 (4), 498A (1983); Asaji Kondo "Bunseki" 1984 (7), 534; R. F. Zuk, et
al., Clinical Chemistry, 31 (7), 1144-1150 (1985); Asaji Kondo, Bunseki, 1986 (6),
387; Japanese Patent Application Laid-open No. 2-6541(1990) (K. Hildenbrand); M. P.
Allen, et al., Clinical Chemistry, 36 (9), 1591-1597 (1990); Japanese Patent Application
Laid-open No. 3-163361(1991) (E. J. Kiser, et al.); Bunseki Kagaku Binran, p.8 (edited
by the Japan Society for Analytical Chemistry: Fourth Revised Edition, Maruzen (1991));
D. Noble, Analytical Chemistry, 65 (23), 1037A (1993); Japanese Patent Application
Laid-open No. 5-157745(1993) (Hidehiko Manabe, et al.); Japanese Patent Application
Laid-open No. 6-213886(1994) (Masao Kitajima, et al.); Japanese Patent Application
Laid-open No. 6-222061(1994) (H. Brandt, et al.); and the like.
[0209] The concentration of a dispersion of the layered inorganic compound, the mixing ratio
thereof to the hydrophilic polymer and a pH value to be controlled are suitably selected
based on parameters such as the type of the layered inorganic compound, the type of
a dyestuff to be adsorbed, the type and amount of the hydrophilic polymer used, the
type and amount of the buffer and the viscosity of the mixture solution so as to obtain
a porosity, a film thickness of the porous layer and a mechanical strength of the
test portion which are required.
[0210] By adding a reagent which reacts with an analyte contained in a sample solution to
form the detectable substance to the porous structure thus formed, the porous structure
can be used as the test portion of the testing piece.
[0211] The amount of the layered inorganic compound added is determined according to a reaction
system used. Depending on the layered inorganic compound used, it is preferably such
as to eliminate a case where the number of adsorption sites is too small for the formed
substance and the formed substance cannot be adsorbed completely and remains in the
solution, or a case where the number of adsorption sites is too large and there are
differences in the concentration of the formed substance adsorbed at these sites,
as in the measuring method of the present invention. As for the preferred amount of
the layered inorganic compound to be added to the reaction system, the total number
of adsorption sites for a dyestuff or the like can be obtained for each type of layered
inorganic compound, and each type of layered inorganic compound can be added so that
the maximum amount of the dyestuff or the like which can be formed does not exceed
the whole adsorption sites of the layered inorganic compound.
[0212] As described above, since the degree of adsorption is influenced by the composition
(pH, ion strength, complex forming components and the like) of a buffer, it can be
adjusted to a desired degree by changing the composition, concentration or pH of the
buffer, or changing the amount of a compound added which can compete with a dyestuff
or the like in adsorption to the layered inorganic compound. Examples of the competitive
compound include metal ions, organic amines, carboxylic acids, phosphates and the
like. Surfactants and soluble polymers can also be used.
[0213] The type of a buffer or a buffer solution used, the pH and concentration of the buffer,
and the like are the same as those described in the section of the measuring method
of the present invention.
[0214] The method of adding a buffer is not particularly limited. A buffer may be added
as a buffer solution having the layered inorganic compound dissolved or dispersed
therein or contained as a dried product together with the layered inorganic compound.
[0215] In the production of a testing piece, although a translucent colloidal agglomerate
may be formed in a dispersion of the layered inorganic compound, this agglomerate
is uniformly re-dispersed by stirring the dispersion. When the agglomerate is particularly
inconvenient, it is recommended to use a phosphate buffer solution to improve the
dispersibility of the layered inorganic compound, thereby making it possible to suppress
the formation of the agglomerate.
[0216] Various surfactants can be further contained in the test portion. Addition of a surfactant
improves the coating properties of the test portion or the like on the support. Since
the surfactant has functions to adsorb to the interface and disperse or dissolve a
substance, it conflicts with the adsorption of the formed detectable substance to
the layered inorganic compound or dissolve the formed detectable substance, whereby
the effect of the present invention may be weakened. Therefore, a surfactant which
does not interfere the adsorption of the formed detectable substance to the layered
inorganic compound is preferably selected as the surfactant to be used in combination
of the layered inorganic compound in the present invention. The amount of the surfactant
used is preferably so small as to avoid the above interruption. The type and amount
of the surfactant are the same as those described in the above section of the measuring
method of the present invention.
Examples
[0217] The following examples are given to further illustrate the present invention.
Example 1
[0218] Peroxidase (POD), 4-AA and N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline
(to be abbreviated as EHSDA hereinafter) as dyestuff precursors, bis-tris buffer (pH
6.5) as a buffer, and smectite as a layered inorganic compound were taken to final
concentrations shown in Table 2, and hydrogen peroxide was added to these to a final
concentration of 120 µmol/l and allowed to react to obtain a reaction solution. The
absorption spectrum of an agglomerated portion of the obtained reaction solution was
measured at a wavelength of 450 to 750 nm.
[0219] POD, 4-AA, EHSDA and a bis-tris buffer were taken to final concentrations shown in
Table 3, and hydrogen peroxide was added to these to a final concentration of 120
µmol/l and allowed to react to obtain a reaction solution. The absorption spectrum
of the obtained reaction solution was measured at a wavelength of 450 to 750 nm as
well.
[0220] The measurement of absorbance was carried out using the JascoV-550 (Japan Spectroscopic
Co. Ltd.) at intervals of 0.5 nm. The scanning rate was 200 nm/min and the bandwidth
was 1.0 nm. A disposable cell having a cell length of 1 cm (made from polymethyl methacrylate)
was used and a 0.1-ml slit was used to measure only an agglomerated portion as an
agglomerate was produced when smectite was added. The results of measurement are shown
in Fig. 1.
Table 2
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD (peroxidase) |
1 U/mil |
| 4-AA*1 |
2 mmol/l |
| EHSDA*2 |
2 mmol/l |
| Bis-tris buffer*3 |
100 mmol/l |
| Smectite*4 |
0.1% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
| *1) 4-aminoantipyrine(4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one) |
| *2) N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline |
| *3) bis(2-hydroxyethyl)iminotris(hydroxymethyl)methane |
| *4) Lucentite SWN (synthetic smectite: manufactured by Co-op Chemical Co.) |
Table 3
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD |
1 U/ml |
| 4-AA |
2 mmol/l |
| EHSDA |
2 mmol/l |
| Bis-tris buffer |
100 mmol/l |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
[0221] The reagents used are shown in Table 4 below.
Table 4
| Reagent |
Reagent concentration |
Maker |
Reagent purity |
| POD |
30 U/ml |
Toyobo |
|
| 4-AA |
60 mmol/l |
Wako Chamicals |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
| EHSDA |
60 mmol/l |
SIGMA |
|
| Bis-tris buffer |
0.25 mmol/l |
Nacalaitesque |
Specially prepared |
| Smectite |
0.3% |
Co-op Chemical |
|
| Hydrogen peroxide |
|
Santoku Kagaku Kogyo |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
[0222] As seen from the results of Fig. 1, it could be confirmed that a reaction proceeded
under the condition that a dyestuff was adsorbed to smectite like the condition that
no smectite was added. The absorption maximum when no smectite was added was about
593 nm and the absorption maximum when smectite was added was about 578 nm.
Example 2
[0223] POD, 4-AA, EHSDA and a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) were taken into a quartz cell having
a cell length of 1 cm to final concentrations shown in Table 3 and incubated at 37°C
for 3 minutes. After the temperature was adjusted, hydrogen peroxide having a concentration
shown in Table 5 was added to start a reaction and absorbance was measured 3 minutes
after the start of the reaction. This reaction reached a termination completely 3
minutes after'the measurement.
[0224] The instrument used was the JascoV-550 (Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd.), and the measurement
wavelength was 593 nm (wavelength near the absorption maximum). A calibration curve
of hydrogen peroxide when no smectite was added could be obtained from this result.
Table 5
| Concentration of hydrogen peroxide(µmol/l) |
Absorbance |
| First time |
Second time |
Average |
| 200 |
1.70 |
1.70 |
1.70 |
| 100 |
0.85 |
0.85 |
0.85 |
| 50 |
0.42 |
0.42 |
0.42 |
| 25 |
0.21 |
0.21 |
0.21 |
| 13 |
0.10 |
0.10 |
0.10 |
| 6.3 |
0.04 |
0.04 |
0.04 |
| 4.2 |
0.01 |
0.01 |
0.01 |
| 1.6 |
0.01 |
0.01 |
0.01 |
Example 3
<Experimental method>
[0225] POD, 4-AA, EHSDA, a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) and synthetic smectite were taken into
a disposable cell having a cell length of 1 cm (made from polymethyl methacrylate)
to final concentrations shown in the above Table 2, and the temperature was adjusted
to 37°C for 180 seconds. After the temperature adjustment, hydrogen peroxide was added
to a final concentration shown in Table 6, and absorbance was measured from 10 seconds
after the addition of hydrogen peroxide for 1,800 seconds at intervals of 2 seconds.
The JascoV-550 (Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd.) was used as a measuring device, and
the measurement wavelength was 577 nm (wavelength near the maximum absorption wavelength).
To measure only an agglomerated portion, a 0.1-ml slit was used. The measurement result
at a hydrogen peroxide concentration of 0 µmol/l was made blank, the difference of
absorbance (ΔAbs) from the blank at 1,800 seconds after the start of measurement was
obtained, and a calibration curve of hydrogen peroxide when smectite was added was
obtained.
<Result>
[0226] The result is shown in Fig. 2 together with the result when no smectite was added
in Example 2. A calibration curve showing the logarithmic representation in both of
the axis of ordinates and the axis of abscissa of the calibration curve of Fig. 2
is shown in Fig. 3. It is understood from Tables 5 and 6 and Figs. 2 and 3 that there
is a correlation between absorbance resulted by the adsorped dyestuff and hydrogen
peroxide. When smectite was added, a calibration curve of r = 0.999 (r = correlation
coefficient) was obtained at a hydrogen peroxide concentration of 0 to 200 µmol/l.
[0227] It is seen from Figs. 2 and 3 that when no smectite was added, the minimum detection
limit was about 6 µmol/l whereas when smectite was added, the minimum detection limit
was improved to 3 µmol/l. The slope of the calibration curve was about 2 times that
when no smectite was added.
Table 6
| Concentration of hydrogen peroxide (µmol/l) |
Absorbance |
ΔAbs |
| 200 |
3.61 |
3.30 |
| 100 |
2.02 |
1.71 |
| 50 |
1.01 |
0.70 |
| 25 |
0.76 |
0.45 |
| 13 |
0.49 |
0.18 |
| 6.3 |
0.40 |
0.09 |
| 3.1 |
0.36 |
0.05 |
| 1.6 |
0.31 |
0.00 |
| 0 |
0.31 |
|
Example 4
<Experimental Method>
[0228] POD, 4-AA, EHSDA, a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) and synthetic smectite were taken into
a disposable cell having a cell length of 1 cm (made from polymethyl methacrylate)
to final concentrations shown in the above Table 2, and the temperature was adjusted
to 37°C for 180 seconds. After the temperature adjustment, hydrogen peroxide was added
to a final concentration of 100 µmol/l, and absorbance was measured from 20 seconds
after the addition of hydrogen peroxide for 600 seconds at intervals of 2 seconds.
The JascoV-550 (Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd.) was used as a measuring intrument, and
the measurement wavelength was 577 nm (wavelength near the maximum absorption wavelength).
To measure only an agglomerated portion, a 0.1-ml slit was used. The measurement result
at a hydrogen peroxide concentration of 0 µmol/l was made blank.
[0229] POD, 4-AA, EHSDA and a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) were taken into a disposable cell
having a cell length of 1 cm (made from polymethyl methacrylate) to final concentrations
shown in the above Table 3, and the temperature was adjusted to 37°C for 180 seconds.
After the temperature adjustment, hydrogen peroxide was added to a final concentration
of 100 µmol/l, and absorbance was measured from 20 seconds after the addition of hydrogen
peroxide for 600 seconds at intervals of 2 seconds. The JascoV-550 (Japan Spectroscopic
Co. Ltd.) was used as a measuring instrument, and the measurement wavelength was 593
nm (wavelength near the maximum absorption wavelength). A 0.1-ml slit was used.
<Results>
[0230] The results are shown in Fig. 4. It is understood from Fig. 4 that the addition of
smectite is effective in increasing sensitivity. It is confirmed that a color developing
reaction reaches a termination in about 30 seconds after the addition of hydrogen
peroxide. Even when smectite was added after color was developed without addition
of smectite, the adsorption and agglomeration of a dyestuff were observed.
Example 5
[0231] 3,3'-(3,3'-Dimethoxy-4,4'-bisphenylene)-bis[2-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyl-2H-tetrazolium
chloride (to be abbreviated as "tetrazolium salt" hereinafter) as a tetrazolium salt,
a phosphate buffer (a mixture of disodium hydrogenphosphate and sodium dihydrogenphosphate
having a pH of 8.5) as a buffer, L-ascorbic acid and smectite (trade name: Lucentite
SWN: synthetic smectite manufactured by Co-op Chemical Co.) were taken into a disposable
tube to final concentrations shown in Table 7 and allowed to react with one another
to develop color. This reaction is known as a reaction for forming water-insoluble
formazan. The obtained color developing solution was diluted 10 times, and the absorption
spectrum of the solution was measured at a wavelength of 400 to 800 nm.
[0232] For comparison, the tetrazolium salt, the phosphate buffer and L-ascorbic acid were
taken into a disposable tube to final concentrations shown in Table 7 as described
above without addition of smectite and allowed to react with one another to develop
color. The absorption spectrum of the obtained color developing solution was measured
at a wavelength of 400 to 800 nm.
[0233] The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was used to measure
absorbance. A disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) having a cell length
of 1 cm was used. The measurement results are shown in Fig. 5.
Table 7
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Tetrazolium salt |
1 mmol/l |
| Phosphate buffer |
100 mmol/l |
| L(+)-Ascorbic acid |
333 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
[0234] Blue was developed, and the absorption maximum wavelength was about 633 nm in the
smectite-non-added system. Red purple was developed, and the absorption maximum wavelength
was about 535 nm in the smectite-added system. It could be confirmed that a reaction
proceeded under the condition that smectite was added like the condition that no smectite
was added. Further, a deposit considered as formazan separated out on the inner surface
of the cell in the smectite-non-added system whereas neither a precipitate nor an
agglomerate was observed in the cell in the smectite-added system. Since the absorption
maximum shifts to a short wavelength side, it is understood that when the same color
developing reaction system as that of this example is used, it is better to carry
out the measurement of absorbance at 633 nm (for the smectite-non-added system) and
535 nm (for the smectite-added system) which are wavelengths near the absorption maximum
wavelengths of the smectite-added system and the smectite-non-added system, respectively.
Example 6
[0235] The same tetrazolium salt, phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) and smectite as those used in
Example 5 were taken into a disposable tube to final concentrations shown in Table
8 and incubated at 30°C for 3 minutes. After incubation, L-ascorbic acid was added
to final concentrations (0 to 333 µmol/l) shown in Table 9 and allowed to react at
30°C for 30 minutes, and absorbance was measured (measurement wavelength of 535 nm).
A sample obtained when ascorbic acid was not added was made blank, and a calibration
curve was drawn from the measurement results.
[0236] For comparison, the tetrazolium salt and the phosphate buffer were taken into a disposable
tube to final concentrations shown in Table 8 in the same manner as described above
except that smectite was not added and incubated at 30°C for 3 minutes. After incubation,
ascorbic acid was added to final concentrations (0 to 333 mol/l) shown in Table 10
and allowed to react at 30°C for 30 minutes, and absorbance was measured (measurement
wavelength of 633 nm). A sample obtained when ascorbic acid was not added was made
blank, and a calibration curve was drawn from the measurement results.
[0237] Fig. 6 shows the obtained calibration curves. In the smectite-non-added system, a
calibration curve of r (correlation coefficient) = 0.9972 was obtained at ascorbic
acid final concentration of 41.7 to 333.3 µmol/l. In the smectite-added system, a
calibration curve of r = 0.9985 was obtained at an ascorbic acid final concentration
of 5.2 to 133.3 µmol/l. It is seen that the slope of the obtained calibration curve
in the smectite-added system was about 2.5 times that of the smectite-non-added system
and that a sensitivity improving effect could be obtained by the addition of smectite.
Further, a deposit considered as formazan separated out on the inner surface of the
tube in the smectite-non-added system whereas neither a precipitate nor an agglomerate
was observed in the tube in the smectite-added system.
[0238] The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan SpectroscopicCo. Ltd. was used to measure
absorbance. A disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) having a cell length
of 1 cm was used.
Table 8
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Tetrazolium salt |
800 µmol/l |
| Phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) |
100 mmol/l |
| L(+)-Ascorbic acid |
0-333.3 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
Table 9: Smectite-added system
| Final concentration of ascorbic acid (µmol/l) |
Absorbance(Abs) |
| 5.2 |
0.174 |
| 10.4 |
0.259 |
| 20.8 |
0.437 |
| 41.7 |
0.818 |
| 66.7 |
1.165 |
| 83.3 |
1.404 |
| 133.3 |
2.097 |
Table 10: Smectite-non-added system
| Final concentration of ascorbic acid (µmol/l) |
Absorbance(Abs) |
| 41.7 |
0.103 |
| 62.5 |
0.178 |
| 83.3 |
0.271 |
| 125.0 |
0.480 |
| 166.7 |
0.773 |
| 250.0 |
1.358 |
| 333.3 |
1.903 |
Example 7
[0239] Hydrochloric acid, smectite (Lucentite SWN of Co-op Chemical Co.), 2,4-dichloroaniline
and sodium nitrite were taken to final concentrations shown in Table 11 in the mentioned
order and mixed together, and a Tsuda reagent (N,N-diethyl-N'-1-naphthylnaphthylethylenediamine
oxalate) was added and allowed to react with the mixture. Thus, an azo dyestuff was
formed and caused to develop color. The absorption spectrum of this dyestuff was measured
at a wavelength of 400 to 800 nm. The sodium nitrite was added in four different concentrations
(0, 8, 16 and 33 µmol/l). The results are shown in Fig. 7.
[0240] For comparison, hydrochloric acid, 2,4-dichloroaniline and sodium nitrite were added
to final concentrations shown in Table 11 in the same manner as described above except
that smectite was not added, and a Tsuda reagent was added to develop color. The absorption
spectrum of the resulting mixture was measured at a wavelength of 400 to 800 nm. The
sodium nitrite was added in four different concentrations (0, 8, 16 and 33 µmol/l).
The results are shown in Fig. 8. The absorption spectra of the smectite-added system
and the smectite-non-added system obtained when the concentration of sodium nitrite
was 33 µmol/l are shown in Fig. 9. The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic
Co. Ltd. was used to measure absorbance. A disposable cell (made form polymethyl methacrylate)
having a cell length of 1 cm was used.
Table 11
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Hydrochloric acid |
1 mol/l |
| 2,4-Dichloroaniline |
200 µmol/l |
| Sodium nitrite |
0-33 µmol/l |
| Tsuda reagent |
200 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
[0241] In the smectite-non-added system, red purple was developed and the absorption maximum
wavelength was about 540 nm. In the smectite-added system, purple was developed and
the absorption maximum wavelength was about 555 nm. It could be confirmed that a reaction
proceeded under the condition that smectite was added like the condition that no smectite
was added. Since the absorption maximum shifts to a long wavelength side, it is understood
that when the same color developing reaction system as that of this example is used,
it is better to carry out the measurement of absorbance at 540 nm (for the smectite-non-added
system) and 555 nm (for the smectite-added system) which are wavelengths near the
absorption maximum wavelengths of the smectite-added system and the smectite-non-added
system, respectively.
Example 8
[0242] The same hydrochloric acid, 2,4-dichloroaniline, sodium nitrite and Tsuda reagent
as those used in Example 7 were taken into a disposable cell (made from polymethyl
methacrylate) to final concentrations shown in Table 12 and allowed to react with
one another at 30°C for 10 minutes. After color was fully developed, smectite was
added to form and precipitate an agglomerate. From 30 seconds after the addition of
smectite, the absorbance of the agglomerate was measured for 20 minutes at intervals
of 1 second (measurement wavelength of 555 nm). To measure only the absorbance of
the agglomerate, a 0.1-ml slit was used. Sodium nitrite was added to final concentrations
shown in Table 13 (0 to 50 µmol/l). The result of a sample obtained when the final
concentration of sodium nitrite was 0 µmol/l was made blank, and the difference of
absorbance from the blank (ΔAbs) 20 minutes after the start of measurement was obtained
to draw a calibration curve.
[0243] As a smectite-non-added system, hydrochloric acid, 2,4-dichloroaniline and sodium
nitrite were taken into a disposable cell to final concentrations shown in Table 12
in the same manner as described above and incubated at 30°C for 3 minutes. A Tsuda
reagent was added, and absorbance was measured from 10 seconds after the addition
for 10 minutes at intervals of 1 second (measurement wavelength of 540 nm). Sodium
nitrite was added to final concentrations shown in Table 14 (0 to 50 µmol/l). Absorbance
10 minutes after the start of measurement was obtained to draw a calibration curve.
The result of a sample obtained when the final concentration of sodium nitrite was
0 µmol/l was made blank. The reaction system used in this experiment reached a termination
completely in 10 minutes.
[0244] Fig. 10 shows the obtained calibration curves. In the smectite-non-added system,
a calibration curve of r (correlation coefficient) = 0.9991 was obtained at a sodium
nitrite final concentration of 1.6 to 50.0 µmol/l. In the smectite-added system, a
calibration curve of r = 0.9940 was obtained at a sodium nitrite final concentration
of 0.4 to 25.0 µmol/l. The inclination of the obtained calibration curve in the smectite-added
system was about 2.5 times that of the smectite-non-added system. It is understood
that a sensitivity increasing effect can be obtained by the addition of smectite.
[0245] The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was used to measure
absorbance. A disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) having a cell length
of 1 cm was used.
Table 12
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Hydrochloric acid |
1 µmol/l |
| 2,4-Dichloroaniline |
200 µmol/l |
| Sodium nitrite |
0-50 µmol/l |
| Tsuda reagent |
200 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
Table 13: Smectite-added system
| Final concentration of sodium nitrite (µmol/l) |
Absorbance (ΔAbs) |
| 0.4 |
0.099 |
| 0.8 |
0.161 |
| 3.1 |
0.445 |
| 12.5 |
1.610 |
| 20.0 |
2.034 |
| 25.0 |
2.620 |
Table 14: Smectite-non-added system
| Final concentration of sodium nitrite (µmol/l) |
Absorbance (Abs) |
| 1.6 |
0.103 |
| 6.3 |
0.178 |
| 12.5 |
0.271 |
| 25.0 |
0.480 |
| 50.0 |
1.358 |
Example 9
[0246] POD, 4-AA and N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline (to be abbreviated
as EHSDMeA hereinafter) as dyestuff precursors, a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) as a buffer
and smectite as a layered inorganic compound were taken into a disposable cell (made
from methacrylate) having a cell length of 1 cm to final concentrations shown in Table
15, and this sample was incubated at 37°C for 180 seconds. As another sample, the
above components excluding smectite were prepared to the same concentrations and incubated
likewise.
[0247] After temperature adjustment, hydrogen peroxide was added to each of these samples
to a final concentration shown in Table 15, and absorbance was measured from 20 seconds
after the addition of hydrogen peroxide for 1,800 seconds at intervals of 2 seconds.
The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was used, and the
measurement wavelength was 630 nm. Since an agglomerate was formed when smectite was
added, a 0.1-ml slit was used to measure only an agglomerated portion. As a background
for the smectite-added system, a sample was prepared by adding smectite to the same
concentration without adding hydrogen peroxide, and this reaction solution was measured
likewise.
Table 15
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD |
1 U/mL |
| 4-AA*1 |
0.05 mmol/L |
| EHSDMeA*2 |
5 mmol/L |
| Bis-tris buffer*3 |
100 mmol/L |
| Smectite |
0.1% |
| Hydrogen peroxide |
100 mmol/L |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
| *1) 4-aminoantipyrine(4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one) |
| *2) N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethylaniline |
| *3) bis(2-hydroxyethyl)iminotris(hydroxymethyl)methane |
| *4) Lucentite SWN (synthetic smectite: manufactured by Co-op Chemical Co.) |
[0248] The used reagents are shown in Table 16 below.
Table 16
| Reagent |
Reagent concentration |
Maker |
Reagent purity |
| POD |
30 U/mL |
Toyobo |
|
| 4-AA |
1.5 mmol/L |
Wako Chemicals |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
| EHSDMeA |
150 mmol/L |
Dojin Kagaku |
|
| Bis-tris buffer |
0.25 mmol/L |
Nacalaitesque |
Specially prepared |
| Smectite |
0.3% |
Co-op Chemical |
|
| Hydrogen peroxide |
300 mmol/L |
Santoku Kagaku Kogyo |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
[0249] The results are shown in Fig. 11. As seen from Fig. 11, a reduction in absorbance
was observed about 3 minutes after the start of a reaction in the smectite-non-added
system whereas no reduction in absorbance was observed in the smectite-added system.
Therefore, it could be confirmed that the detection reaction proceeded when smectite
was added like when no smectite was added and further that a dyestuff formed by an
oxidation condensation between 4-AA and EHSDMeA was not oxidized and decomposed by
hydrogen peroxide and its discoloration was suppressed due to its adsorption to smectite.
Example 10
[0250] POD, 4-AA and EHSDMeA, a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) and smectite were taken into a
disposable cell (made from methacrylate) having a cell length of 1 cm to final concentrations
shown in Table 17 and Table 18 to prepare five different samples (Sample Nos. 1 to
5), and each sample was incubated at 37°C for 180 seconds.
[0251] After temperature adjustment, hydrogen peroxide was added to each of these samples
in an amount shown in Table 18 to start a reaction. Ascorbic acid was also added in
an amount shown in Table 18, 60 seconds after the addition of hydrogen peroxide, and
absorbance was measured 20 seconds after the addition for 300 seconds at intervals
of 1 seconds. The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was
used as a measuring device, and the measurement wavelength was 630 nm. A 0.1-ml slit
was used to measure only an agglomerated portion.
Table 17
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD |
1 U/mL |
| 4-AA |
2 mmol/L |
| EHSDMeA |
2 mmol/L |
| Bis-tris buffer |
100 mmol/L |
| Smectite*1 |
(see Table 18) |
| Hydrogen peroxide |
(see Table 18) |
| L(+)-Ascorbic acid |
(see Table 18) |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
| *1) Lucentite SWN (synthetic smectite manufactured by Co-op Chemical Co.) |
Table 18
| Sample No. |
Smectite (%) |
Ascorbic acid (mg/dl) |
Hydrogen peroxide (µmol/l) |
| 1 |
0 |
0 |
100 |
| 2 |
0 |
5(284 µmol/L) |
100 |
| 3 |
0.1 |
0 |
100 |
| 4 |
0.1 |
5(284 µmol/L) |
100 |
| 5 |
0.1 |
0 |
0 |
[0252] The used reagents are shown in Table 19 below.
Table 19
| Reagent |
Reagent concentration |
Maker |
Reagent purity |
| POD |
30 U/mL |
Toyobo |
|
| 4-AA |
60 mmol/L |
Wako Chemicals |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
| EHSDAMeA |
60 mmol/L |
Dojin Kagaku |
|
| Bis-tris buffer |
0.25 mmol/L |
Nacalaitesque |
Specially prepared |
| Smectite |
0.3% |
Co-op Chemical |
|
| Hydrogen peroxide |
3 mmol/L |
Santoku Kagaku Kogyo |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
| Ascorbic acid |
150 mg/dl |
Nacalaitesque |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
[0253] The results are shown in Table 18 and Fig. 12. Fig. 13 is an enlarged view of a section
for 0 to 60 seconds in Fig. 12. Absorbances (Abs) 0, 60 and 300 seconds after the
start of measurement are shown in Table 20. Further, to subtract the influence of
agglomeration, ΔAbs was obtained for Sample Nos. 3 and 4 from the difference from
the absorbance of Sample No. 5. The results are shown as data within parentheses in
Table 20.
[0254] As seen from Figs. 12 and 13, in the smectite-non-added system, discoloration occurred
immediately after ascorbic acid was added. At the time of the start of measurement
(20 seconds after the addition of ascorbic acid), only about 20% of color development
when ascorbic acid was not added was seen and the sample became achromatic 60 seconds
after the start of measurement (80 seconds after the addition of ascorbic acid).
[0255] To contrary, in the smectite-added system, about 90% of color development was seen
at the time of the start of measurement (20 seconds after the addition of ascorbic
acid), about 80% of color development was seen 60 seconds after the start of measurement
(80 seconds after the addition of ascorbic acid), and about 50% of color development
was seen 300 seconds after the start of measurement (320 seconds after the addition
of ascorbic acid).
[0256] It could be confirmed from this result that the reduction and decomposition of a
formed dyestuff by ascorbic acid was suppressed by the addition of smectite.
Table 20
| Sample No. |
0 second after (ΔAbs) |
60 seconds after (ΔAbs) |
300 seconds after (ΔAbs) |
| 1 |
1.15 |
1.14 |
1.11 |
| 2 |
0.23 |
0.00 |
0.00 |
| 3 |
1.26(1.16) |
1.33(1.23) |
1.63(1.49) |
| 4 |
1.16(1.06) |
1.07(0.97) |
0.84(0.70) |
| 5 |
0.10 |
0.10 |
0.14 |
Example 11
[0257] 3,3'-(3,3'-Dimethoxy-4,4'-biphenylene)-bis[2-(p-nitrophenyl)-5-phenyl-2H-tetrazolium]chloride
(to be abbreviated as "tetrazolium salt" hereinafter) as a tetrazolium salt, a phosphate
buffer (a mixture of disodium hydrogenphosphate and sodium dihydrogenphosphate having
a pH of 8.5) as a buffer, L-ascorbic acid and smectite (trade name: Lucentite SWN,
synthetic smectite manufactured by Co-op Chemical Co.) were taken into a disposable
cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) to final concentrations shown in Table 21
and incubated at 30°C for 180 seconds. Thereafter, L-ascorbic acid was added to start
a reaction. Absorbance was measured from 10 seconds after addition for 300 seconds
at intervals of 1 second to observe time-cource of absorbance. The measurement wavelength
was 535 nm, and the reaction temperature was 30°C.
[0258] For comparison, the tetrazolium salt and the phosphate buffer were taken into a disposable
cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) to final concentrations shown in Table 21
in the same manner as described above except that smectite was not added and incubated
at 30°C for 180 seconds. Thereafter, L-ascorbic acid was added to start a reaction.
Absorbance was measured from 10 seconds after addition for 300 seconds at intervals
of 1 second to observe time-cource of absorbance. The measurement wavelength was 633
nm, and the reaction temperature was 30°C.
[0259] The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was used to measure
absorbance, and a disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) having a cell
length of 1 cm was used. Both of the above measurement wavelengths are near the absorption
maximum wavelengths. Fig. 14 is a graph showing absorbance with respect to elapsed
time. The reaction became stable about 50 seconds after the start of measurement in
the smectite-added system whereas the reaction became stable about 300 seconds after
the start of measurement in the smectite-non-added system. It is understood from this
that the reaction rate is increased by the addition of smectite.
[0260] This reaction is known as a reaction for forming water-insoluble formazan. In the
smectite-added system, precipitation or agglomeration was not observed in the cell.
Table 21
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Tetrazolium salt |
800 µmol/l |
| Phosphate buffer (pH 8.5) |
100 mmol/l |
| L(+)-ascorbic acid |
83.3 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
Example 12
[0261] Hydrochloric acid, smectite (Lucentite SWN of Co-op Chemical Co.), 2,4-dichloroaniline
and sodium nitrite were taken into a disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate)
to final concentrations shown in Table 22 and incubated at 30°C for 180 seconds. The
concentration of sodium nitrite was 1.6, 6.3, 12.5, 35.0 and 50.0 µmol/l within the
range of 0 to 50 µmol/l.
[0262] After incubation, a Tsuda reagent (N,N-diethyl-N'-1-naphthylnaphthylethylenediamine
oxalate) was added, and absorbance was measured from 10 seconds after addition for
600 seconds at intervals of 1 second to observe time-cource of absorbance. The measurement
wavelength was 555 nm, and the reaction temperature was 30°C.
[0263] For comparison, hydrochloric acid, 2,4-dichloroaniline and sodium nitrite were taken
into a disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) to final concentrations
shown in Table 22 in the same manner as described above except that smectite was not
added and incubated at 30°C for 180 seconds. Thereafter, a Tsuda reagent was added,
and absorbance was measured from 10 seconds after addition for 600 seconds at intervals
of 1 second to observe time-cource of absorbance. The measurement wavelength was 540
nm, and the reaction temperature was 30°C.
[0264] The JascoV-550 spectrophotometer of Japan Spectroscopic Co. Ltd. was used to measure
absorbance, and a disposable cell (made from polymethyl methacrylate) having a cell
length of 1 cm was used. Both of the measurement wavelengths are near the absorption
maximum wavelengths.
[0265] Figs. 15 to 17 are graphs showing the measurement results of absorbance with respect
to elapsed time. Out of these, Fig. 15 is a graph in the smectite-non-added system,
Fig. 16 is a graph in the smectite-added system, Fig. 17 is a graph in the smectite-added
system and smectite-non-added system when the concentration of sodium nitrite is 25.0
µmol/l. According to these figures, the reaction reaches a termination in about 300
seconds after the start of measurement in the smectite-non-added system whereas the
reaction reaches a termination in about 30 seconds after the start of measurement
in the smectite-added system. It is understood from this that the reaction rate is
increased by the addition of smectite.
Table 22
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Hydrochloric acid |
1 mol/l |
| 2,4-Dichloroaniline |
200 µmol/l |
| Sodium nitrite |
0-50 µmol/l |
| Tsuda reagent |
200 µmol/l |
| Smectite |
0.1% or 0% |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
Example 13
[0266] POD, 4-AA and N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxylaniline (to be abbreviated
as EHSDA hereinafter) as dyestuff precursors and a bis-tris buffer (pH 6.5) as a buffer
were taken to final concentrations shown in Table 23, and hydrogen peroxide was added
to these to obtain a color developing solution. 30 µl of the obtained color developing
solution was dropped onto filter paper (No.2 of Toyo Roshi Co.) which was impregnated
with a 1% dispersion (solvent: distilled water) of a layered inorganic compound (synthetic
smectite: trade name Lucentite SWN of Co-op Chemical Co.) and dried, and untreated
filter paper to observe the diffusion of the color developing solution. Assuming that
the color developing solution was infiltrated and diffused in a circle, the maximum
portion and the minimum portion of the diameter of the circle were measured to obtain
the area of a dyestuff-diffused spot from a mean value of these.
Table 23
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD |
1 U/mL |
| 4-AA*1 |
2 mmol/L |
| EHSDA*2 |
2 mmol/L |
| Bis-tris buffer solution*3 |
100 mmol/L |
| Hydrogen peroxide |
100 µmol/L |
| |
(total amount of 3 ml) |
| *1) 4-aminoantipyrine(4-amino-1,2-dihydro-1,5-dimethyl-2-phenyl-3H-pyrazol-3-one) |
| *2) N-ethyl-N-(2-hydroxy-3-sulfopropyl)-3,5-dimethoxyaniline |
| *3) bis(2-hydroxyethyl)iminotris(hydroxymethyl)methane |
[0267] The used reagents are shown in Table 24 below.
Table 24
| Reagent |
Reagent concentration |
Maker |
Reagent purity |
| POD |
30 U/mL |
Toyobo |
|
| 4-AA |
60 mmol/L |
Wako Chemials |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
| EHSDA |
60 mmol/L |
SIGMA |
|
| Bis-tris buffer |
0.25 mmol/L |
Nacalaitesque |
Specially prepared |
| Smectite |
1% |
Co-op Chemical |
|
| Hydrogen peroxide |
|
Santoku Kagaku Kogyo |
Guaranteed reagent grade |
[0268] The obtained diameter, area and color tone of the spot are shown in Table 25. Fig.
18 and Fig. 19 schematically show filter paper in which the color developing solution
is diffused.
Table 25
| |
Diameter (mm) |
Area (mm2) |
Color |
| Filter paper impregnated with smectite |
7-8 |
44 |
Blue purple |
| Untreated filter paper |
20-22 |
350 |
Blue |
[0269] In the filter paper impregnated with a dispersion of smectite, the diffusion of a
dyestuff was suppressed more and the spot was smaller (about 1/8 in area) compared
with the untreated filter paper. However, an achromatic portion devoid of a dyestuff
of the color developing solution was diffused to the same extent as that of the untreated
filter paper. It was confirmed from this that the dyestuff was selectively adsorbed
to smectite contained in the filter paper.
[0270] It was observed visually that the color tone of the spot was darker in the filter
paper impregnated with smectite than in the untreated filter paper and that the color
tone shifted to a short wavelength side. Further, even when the filter paper impregnated
with smectite was washed with water, the dyestuff did not elute.
[0271] It was found that the dyestuff was adsorbed to the filter paper by the addition of
smectite to the filter paper and that the diffusion of the dyestuff was thereby prevented
and the elution of the dyestuff was also prevented.
[0272] Therefore, it is understood that, when the testing piece of the,present invention
is used, the formed dyestuff does not move or elute and the accuracy and sensitivity
of measurement can be improved. It is also understood that measurement can be carried
out with ease because the dyestuff is not moved or concentrated by the drying of the
test portion and the formed dyestuff does not elute even if the testing piece is kept
immersed in the sample.
Example 14
[0273] Urine test paper (multi-item test paper for measuring nitrite, glucose, occult blood,
bilirubin and urobilinogen contained in the urine: general test paper available on
the market, prepared by forming a test portion by impregnating filter paper with each
reagent and affixing the filter paper to a plastic film together with a test portion
for calibration) was immersed in control urine prepared by general formulation, pulled
up immediately and left to stand for about 30 seconds until coloration was observed,
and a piece of the same smectite-impregnated filter paper as used in Example 13 was
pressed against the test paper to transfer a dyestuff to the piece of the smectite-impregnated
filter paper. The spreading of the dyestuff on the piece of the filter paper was observed
visually. The piece of the filter paper was washed well with running water to observe
visually whether color came out.
[0274] As controls, Toyo Filter Paper No.2 and Toyo Filter Paper No. 131 not treated with
smectite were used to carry out the same operation.
[0275] The measuring method and formulation in each test are as follows. The results are
shown in Table 26 below.
Nitrite test: Griess method
[0276] 4-Aminobenzenearsonic acid was allowed to react with a nitrite under an acidic condition
to form a diazonium salt and the diazonium salt was then coupled with N-1-naphthylethylenediamine
dihydrochloride to form an azo dyestuff. As for formulation, one sheet of filter paper
was impregnated with 0.26 mg of N-1-naphthylethylenediamine dihydrochloride and 0.57
mg of 4-aminobenzenearsonic acid and divided into 100 portions. One of them was made
a test portion. One portion absorbed about 6 µl of a solution.
Glucose test:
[0277] Hydrogen peroxide formed by glucose oxidase was allowed to react with a color indicator
(tetrabase and guaiac as chromogens) by the catalytic function of peroxidase to develop
color by oxidation. As for formulation, one sheet of filter paper was impregnated
with 470 IU of glucose oxidase, 219 PU of peroxidase, 13.0 mg of tetrabase and 4.3
mg of guaiac and divided into 100 portions. One of them was made a test portion. One
portion absorbed about 6 µl of a solution.
Occult blood test:
[0278] This is a method making use of the decomposition of cumene hydroperoxide by hemoglobin
and the oxidation color development of o-tolidine by the oxygen of a formed active
group. The same effect can be expected when a benzidine (such as 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine)
is used in place of o-tolidine. As for formulation, one sheet of filter paper was
impregnated with 52.6 mg of cumene hydroperoxide and 7.6 mg of o-tolidine and divided
into 100 portions. One of them was made a test portion. One portion absorbed about
6 µl of a solution.
Bilirubin test:
[0279] This is a method making use of a reaction in which a diazonium salt was formed from
2-methyl-5-nitroaniline or sulfanilic acid and sodium nitrite as a diazo reagent under
an acidic condition and coupled with bilirubin in the presence of dyphylline to form
azobilirubin. As for formulation, one sheet of filter paper was impregnated with 3.8
mg of 2-methyl-5-nitroaniline, 2.1 mg of sodium nitrite and a small amount of dyphylline
and divided into 100 portions. One of them was made a test portion. One portion absorbed
about 6 µl of a solution.
Urobilinogen test:
[0280] This is a method making use of an azo-coupling reaction between urobilinogen and
a 3,3'-dimethoxybiphenyl-4,4'-diazonium boron tetrafluoride salt under an acidic condition.
As for formulation, one sheet of filter paper was impregnated with 0.36 mg of 3,3'-dimethoxybiphenyl-4,4'-diazonium
tetrafluoride borate and divided into 100 portions. One of them was made a test portion.
One portion absorbed about 6 µl of a solution.
Table 26
| |
Spreading of dyestuff |
Coming-out of color by washing |
| Test |
Smectite impregnated |
Untreated |
Smectite impregnated |
Untreated |
| No. 2 |
No. 131 |
No. 2 |
No. 131 |
| Nitrite test |
○ |
× |
× |
○ |
× |
× |
| Glucose test |
○ |
× |
× |
○ |
× |
× |
| Occult blood test |
○ |
× |
× |
○ |
× |
× |
| Bilirubin test |
○ |
× |
× |
○ |
× |
× |
| Urobilinogen test |
○ |
× |
× |
○ |
× |
× |
| spreading of dyestuff ... ○: no spreading, ×: much spreading. |
| coming-out of color ... ○: color does not come out, ×: color comes out. |
[0281] As shown by the results of Table 26, a dyestuff was adsorbed to filter paper impregnated
with a layered inorganic compound without speading and color did not come out by washing.
Therefore, it is understood that the diffusion of the dyestuff is suppressed and the
elution of the dyestuff is prevented in the filter paper impregnated with the layered
inorganic compound. Therefore, in the testing piece of the present invention, the
formed dyestuff does not move or elute and improvement in the accuracy and sensitivity
of measurement can be expected. Since the concentration and movement of the dyestuff
by drying the test portion do not occur and the formed dyestuff does not elute while
the testing piece is kept immersed in the sample, measurement can be carried out with
ease. Further, since the formed dyestuff does not pollute the adjacent test portion
in the multi-item testing piece, the interval between adjacent test portions is reduced,
thereby making it possible to reduce the size of the testing piece.
[0282] When the formed dyestuff was exposed to the air at room temperature without shielding
light while the dyestuff was infiltrated into untreated filter paper, color change
and discoloration were observed and coloration completely different from that right
after a reaction was seen about 1 month later. On the other hand, even when the formed
dyestuff adsorbed to filter paper containing a layered inorganic compound was exposed
to the air at room temperature without shielding light, color change and discoloration
were not observed for at least 3 months.
[0283] The above facts show the applicability of the present invention. That is, when the
testing piece of the present invention is used, a sample is taken at a patient's home,
reaction coloration is caused on the testing piece, and this testing piece is mailed
to an examination center at a remote place, the same measurement result as that right
after reaction coloration can be obtained. In other words, the testing piece of the
present invention is stable in coloration, is free from the concentration of a dyestuff
caused by drying and the elution thereof caused by water leakage. Therefore, it can
be used as a mailable testing piece.
Example 15
[0284] A solution prepared as shown in Table 27 below was applied to a polyethylene terephthalate
(PET) film treated with ultraviolet light by a doctor knife to a film thickness of
100 µm and dried. This coating film was cut into a 1-cm square piece together with
the PET film, and the piece was sandwiched between glass plates with 500-µm spacing
therebetween as shown in Fig. 20 to prepare a reaction cell. Fig. 20 schematically
shows this reaction cell.
[0285] 2 mmol/l of hydrogen peroxide was added to this reaction cell, and color development
at this point was observed. A solution prepared in the same manner as described above
except smectite was not added was used to form a reaction cell, and color development
was observed.
Table 27
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| POD |
1 U/mL |
| 4-AA |
2 mmol/L |
| EHSDA |
2 mmol/L |
| Bis-tris buffer solution |
100 mmol/L |
| Smectite*1 |
0.3% |
| HPC-M*2 |
1% |
| *1) Lucentite SWN (synthetic smectite of Co-op Chemical Co. ) |
| *2) hydroxyethylpropyl cellulose |
[0286] The elution of the formed dyestuff from the coating film formed without addition
of smectite was observed. On the other hand, when smectite was added, the elution
of the formed dyestuff was not observed.
Example 16
[0287] An example of formulation of fabricating the testing piece of the present invention
having a detection layer composed of a porous structure is shown below. This testing
piece is schematically shown in Fig. 21.
[0288] Filter paper (2 Chr of Whatman Co.) was immersed in a reagent solution containing
GOD (glucose oxidase) and POD as enzymes prepared as shown in Table 28 below and dried
at 40°C for 30 minutes. This filter paper was cut into a 5 mm x 5 mm piece which was
then bonded to one end of a 5 mm x 100 mm white plastic film with adhesive double-coated
tape to prepare a testing piece having a test portion composed of the filter paper.
Table 28
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| GOD |
100 U/mL |
| POD |
100 U/mL |
| 4-AA |
5 g/L |
| EHSDA |
3 g/L |
| Phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.0) |
0.1 mol/L |
| Smectite |
1% |
[0289] In this testing piece, 6 µl of blood plasma was dropped onto the test portion by
a pipette, or the testing piece was immersed in the urine collected into a glass,
and a reaction was allowed to proceed, and then the intensity of color developed in
the detection layer was measured with a reflectiometer or the like so that the concentration
of glucose contained in the blood plasma or urine can be measured. The porous structure
layer containing the layered inorganic compound in the present invention can be used
as the detection layer which also serves as the sample suction layer, the reagent
layer and the reaction layer in the testing piece of the present invention.
Example 17
[0290] An example of a method for producing the testing piece having a porous structure
detection area of the present invention will be described below. Fig. 22 schematically
shows this testing piece.
[0291] Filter paper (2 Chr of Whatman Co.) was immersed in a reagent solution containing
GOD and POD as enzymes prepared as shown in Table 29 below and dried at 40°C for 30
minutes. This filter paper was cut into a 5 mm x 5 mm piece which was then bonded
to another 5 mm x 100 mm filter paper (2 Chr of Whatman Co.) at a predetermined location
(reaction area in Fig. 22) by pressure. Thereafter, another filter paper (2 Chr of
Whatman Co.) was immersed in a dispersion of a layered inorganic compound prepared
as shown in Table 30 below and dried naturally at room temperature. This filter paper
was cut into a 5 mm x 5 mm piece which was then bonded to the above 5 mm x 100 mm
filter paper (2 Chr of Whatman Co.) having a reaction area at a predetermined location
(holding area in Fig. 22) by pressure. The thus produced testing piece had a sample
suction area, a diffusion area, a reaction area, a holding area for adsorbing a detectable
substance and an area for absorbing excess of the sample. The holding area also served
as a detection area.
Table 29
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| GOD |
100 U/mL |
| POD |
200 U/mL |
| 4-AA |
5 g/L |
| EHSDA |
3 g/L |
| Phosphate buffer solution (pH 7.0) |
0.1 mol/L |
Table 30
| Reagent |
Final concentration |
| Bis-tris buffer solution (pH 6.5) |
0.1 mol/L |
| Smectite |
1% |
[0292] The sample suction area of this testing piece was immersed in the blood plasma collected
into a cuvette or the urine collected into a glass. The sample passed through the
sample suction area and the diffusion area and reached the reaction area where it
was mixed with the reagent to become a reaction solution. After the reaction solution
further passed through the reaction time control area and the holding area, the testing
piece was pulled up. The intensity of coloration in the holding area was measured
with a reflectiometer or the like to measure the concentration of glucose contained
in the blood plasma or the urine.
[0293] The porous structure containing the layered inorganic compound in the present invention
can be used as the detection area which also serves as the holding area for adsorbing
a detectable substance (dyestuff) contained in the reaction solution in this example
of the testing piece.
Industrial applicability
[0294] The measuring method of the present invention can be used as a method for measuring
a substance with high sensitivity and high accuracy. That is, according to the first
method of the present invention, high-sensitivity measurement is made possible by
measuring a detectable substance after a layered inorganic compound such as a clay
mineral is added to a reaction system to adsorbe the detectable substance. According
to the second measuring method of the present invention, by adding a layered inorganic
compound such as a clay mineral to a reaction system, a detectable substance such
as a dyestuff is adsorbed to the layered inorganic compound and protected, whereby
the decomposition of the detectable substance by excess of hydrogen peroxide, reducing
ascorbic acid or the like can be suppressed and the detectable substance can be stabilized.
Therefore, the discoloration or the like can be prevented if a dyestuff is the detectable
substance, and stable high-sensitivity and high-accuracy measurement is possible.
According to the third method of the present invention, by adding a layered inorganic
compound such as a clay mineral to a reaction system which forms a detectable substance,
the rate of the formation reaction is increased to enable quick measurement. According
to the fourth measuring method of the present invention, by carrying out the formation
reaction of a detectable substance by dispersing a layered inorganic compound such
as a clay mineral into a reaction solvent, high-sensitivity measurement is made possible
even in a reaction system which forms an insoluble substance. According to the testing
piece of the present invention, a dyestuff or the like is hardly diffused and eluted,
and more sensitive and accurate simple analysis is made possible.
[0295] The measuring method of the present invention can be used for the detection, determination
or the like of bio-components contained in the body fluid such as urine and blood,
foods, medicines, substances existent in trace amounts in natural environment, industrial
chemical substances, substances contained in trace amounts in waste, and the like.